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MUN/St George Madrid Model United Nations
St George Madrid Model United Nations
Part of the St George Madrid Model United Nations series

St George Madrid Model United Nations

Madrid, Spain · high-school

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Dates
Sep 25–2026 (day: 27)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
120
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

St George Madrid Model United Nations is a high-school conference hosted in the Spanish capital, drawing delegations into a compact weekend of committee work. The event is listed through mymun and positions itself as an accessible stop on the European autumn circuit, with a delegate pool sized for substantive debate rather than spectacle. For students and faculty advisors weighing where to send a team, SGMMUN offers Madrid as both backdrop and convening point - a city with deep diplomatic infrastructure and easy continental access, paired with a conference format aimed squarely at secondary-school participants.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Madrid sits at a useful crossroads for European Model UN. Spain's geographic position, its role in EU and Ibero-American affairs, and the density of international schools in and around the capital all make the city a natural host for high-school diplomacy. A conference rooted there gives delegations a chance to debate global questions in a setting where those questions are lived daily. The conference falls in the autumn window, which shapes who attends and how. Clubs often use this slot as a season-opener: chairs are rotating in, younger members are being trained, and institutional memory is being rebuilt after the summer break. A conference of this kind becomes a proving ground rather than a capstone, and the experience tends to set the tone for the rest of the academic year. The scale also matters. With the expected delegate cohort kept deliberately modest, committees stay small enough that first-time speakers can realistically reach the floor, and chairs can give individual feedback rather than just managing crowd flow. That is a different value proposition from the mega-conferences that dominate the spring calendar, and it suits schools that prioritize learning curves over trophy counts.

How to prepare

Preparation for a high-school conference in Madrid should start with the basics of UN procedure but not stop there. Delegates entering the autumn term often need a refresher on motions, points, and the difference between a moderated and unmoderated caucus before they can engage substantively. Faculty advisors should plan at least one mock session before departure, ideally with the same committee format the conference will use. Research should be anchored in primary sources. The UN's own Model UN guide and the main United Nations homepage remain the most reliable starting points for understanding mandates, voting blocs, and the actual texts of relevant resolutions. Delegates who arrive with a working knowledge of their country's recent voting record and public statements consistently outperform those who rely on summary briefings alone. Finally, advisors should treat the weekend as a feedback loop. Because the conference is compact and the delegate pool is contained, students can debrief between sessions, adjust their approach, and try again the next day. That iterative arc is one of the most valuable things a school can extract from an early-season conference, and it is worth building debrief time into the travel schedule before the team boards the flight home.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
high-school
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Sep 25, 2026 – Sep 27, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is this conference designed for?

    SGMMUN is a high-school level conference, meaning the committees, topics, and pacing are calibrated for secondary-school delegates rather than university students or middle-schoolers.

  • Where does the conference take place?

    The event is held in Madrid, Spain, giving delegations access to a major European capital with strong diplomatic and educational infrastructure.

  • How large is the conference?

    The expected delegate cohort is kept relatively small, which favors committees where individual delegates can speak more often and chairs can give closer feedback.

  • When in the academic calendar does it fall?

    The conference is scheduled for the autumn term, positioning it as a season-opener rather than a year-end capstone event.

  • How do schools apply?

    Registration is handled through the mymun listing for SGMMUN, which is the canonical source for the conference's current cycle.

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

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