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MUN/Sobieski Model United Nations
Sobieski Model United Nations
Part of the Sobieski Model United Nations series

Sobieski Model United Nations

Warsaw, Poland · high-school

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Dates
Nov 6–2026 (day: 8)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
150
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

Sobieski Model United Nations brings a compact delegate body to Warsaw for a late-autumn weekend of committee work, drawing high-school participants into the rhythms of multilateral debate. The conference sits in Poland's capital, a city whose own diplomatic history gives committee floors an unusually tangible backdrop. The program is built around a high-school cohort and a manageable delegate pool, which tends to favor substantive debate over crowd management. For students testing whether MUN belongs in their wider academic and civic trajectory, Sobieski offers a contained, European setting in which to find out.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Central European MUN circuits have grown denser over the past decade, and Warsaw conferences increasingly serve as anchor points for delegates from across the region. A high-school event of this size in the Polish capital matters because it lets students engage with European security, enlargement, and rule-of-law questions in the city where many of those debates have real institutional weight. The scale also matters. A tighter delegate count means committees are less likely to fracture into procedural noise, and chairs can push for genuine negotiation rather than speaker-list management. That is the environment in which first-time and intermediate delegates actually learn the craft. For educators and program leads, Sobieski is a useful data point on how the Polish MUN scene is maturing - what topics local organizers prioritize, how committees are structured, and how international delegations are welcomed. The conference is small enough to be legible and serious enough to be worth tracking.

How to prepare

Delegates aiming for Warsaw should start with the basics of parliamentary procedure and resolution drafting, then layer in regional substance: European security architecture, the eastern neighborhood, energy policy, and the institutional triangle of the EU, NATO, and the UN. A high-school-level conference rewards delegates who can speak clearly about their assigned country's position rather than those who memorize trivia. Research should lean on primary sources - mission statements, foreign ministry briefings, voting records in the UN General Assembly - rather than secondary commentary. The official UN Model UN guide is a sensible starting point for delegates new to the format, and the UN's own topic pages give a reliable baseline on agenda items likely to surface in General Assembly and ECOSOC committees. Practical preparation matters too. Delegates traveling to Warsaw in the late-autumn window should plan for cold weather, short daylight, and the logistics of an international weekend conference. Position papers, opening speeches, and a working knowledge of bloc dynamics will carry a delegate further than any single clever amendment. For advisors, the prep angle is to use Sobieski as a structured rehearsal: a defined weekend, a defined committee assignment, and a defined set of deliverables that can be debriefed afterward against clear learning goals.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
high-school
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Nov 6, 2026 – Nov 8, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who can participate in Sobieski Model United Nations?

    The conference is aimed at high-school delegates, making it appropriate for secondary students building early MUN experience rather than university competitors.

  • Where is the conference held?

    Sobieski MUN takes place in Warsaw, Poland, giving delegates a Central European setting with strong diplomatic and historical context for committee debates.

  • How large is the conference?

    It is a mid-sized high-school event, intentionally compact enough to support substantive committee work rather than large-hall procedural debate.

  • When does the conference take place?

    The conference runs across a weekend in the late-autumn part of the academic calendar, which is typical for European high-school MUN circuits.

  • How should delegates prepare?

    Delegates should focus on procedure, position-paper writing, and substantive research grounded in UN primary sources, with attention to European regional topics given the Warsaw setting.

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

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