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MUN/International Conference on Restructuring of the Global Economy

International Conference on Restructuring of the Global Economy

Part of the International Conference on Restructuring of the Global Economy series

International Conference on Restructuring of the Global Economy

OXFORD, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland · college

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Dates
Aug 10–2026 (day: 11)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
TBD
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

The International Conference on Restructuring of the Global Economy (ROGEE) returns to Oxford as a compact, college-level Model UN gathering focused on the architecture of the world economy. Hosted in the United Kingdom and listed through the mymun conference directory, ROGEE positions itself as a substantive, policy-heavy gathering rather than a ceremonial one. The conference is built around a single thematic spine - how the global economy is being rewired - and asks university delegates to translate that abstraction into committee-floor decisions. Delegates can expect briefings that lean closer to a graduate seminar than a high school primer, with the expectation that participants arrive already fluent in macro fundamentals.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Most Model UN circuits still organize themselves around the classical UN system: General Assembly committees, the Security Council, and a rotating cast of crisis rooms. ROGEE is part of a smaller, more specialized tier that takes a single contested question - the restructuring of the global economy - and refuses to dilute it. That focus matters because the real-world debate it mirrors is genuinely unresolved: industrial policy, capital controls, supply chain reshoring, sovereign debt workouts, and the future of the dollar system are all live arguments inside finance ministries right now. For college delegates, a conference like this is also a credentialing signal. Oxford as a host city carries weight in graduate admissions and policy fellowships, and substantive economic MUNs tend to attract recruiters and observers from think tanks and consultancies in a way that broader circuits do not. It also matters because the economic-restructuring frame forces delegates out of the comfortable language of cooperation. You cannot caucus your way to a unanimous communique on industrial subsidies or debt relief without taking sides, and that is precisely the muscle that distinguishes a strong economic MUN from a performative one.

How to prepare

Preparation for ROGEE should start with the structural debate, not the headlines. Delegates need a working map of the institutions actually doing the restructuring - the IMF, the World Bank, the WTO, the Bank for International Settlements, the G20, and the regional development banks - and a sense of which of them are gaining authority and which are being routed around. From there, build a position that is internally consistent across three layers: monetary policy and reserve currency exposure, trade and industrial policy, and development finance. Many delegates lose credibility by advocating capital controls in one clause and free capital mobility in another. ROGEE's college-level framing means chairs will notice. Finally, read at least two recent sovereign debt restructurings in detail. The mechanics of creditor committees, comparability of treatment, and the role of Chinese lending are now standard knowledge for anyone claiming expertise on the global economy, and they translate directly into negotiable text. Logistically, treat Oxford as an expensive destination and plan travel and accommodation early. The application portal lives on mymun, and the listing there is the authoritative source for committee assignments and any updates.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
college
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Aug 10, 2026 – Aug 11, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is eligible to attend ROGEE?

    ROGEE is pitched at the college level, meaning university students rather than secondary school delegates are the intended audience.

  • Where is the conference held?

    The conference is hosted in Oxford, United Kingdom, which shapes both the cost profile and the academic register of the event.

  • How long does the conference run?

    ROGEE runs as a short, intensive format spanning two consecutive days in August, which puts a premium on delegates arriving with pre-written position papers and clear negotiating priorities.

  • How do I apply?

    Applications are handled through the mymun conference platform, which serves as the primary listing and registration channel for the event.

  • What kind of committees should I expect?

    Given the conference's explicit focus on restructuring of the global economy, committees are likely to cluster around international financial institutions, trade bodies, and economic coordination forums rather than general political organs.

Last verified May 27, 2026 · Source: mymun.com

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