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MUN/Unity And Internationality Model United Nations
Unity And Internationality Model United Nations
Part of the Unity And Internationality Model United Nations series

Unity And Internationality Model United Nations

Wrocław, Poland · high-school

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Dates
Dec 4–2026 (day: 6)
Fee
$167
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
100
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

Unity And Internationality Model United Nations convenes high school delegates in Wrocław, Poland for a multi-day simulation focused on collaborative diplomacy and cross-border problem solving. The conference uses a compact format that brings together a manageable cohort of participants, allowing committee work to stay substantive rather than spectacular. Hosted in one of Central Europe's most historically layered cities, the event positions itself as an accessible entry point for secondary school students who want to test their negotiating instincts against peers drawn from across the region.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Wrocław has long been a meeting point of competing European traditions, and a conference held there carries a particular weight for students learning how diplomacy actually functions. The choice of venue is not incidental: it places delegates inside a city whose own modern identity was shaped by twentieth-century treaty making, population movements, and the slow construction of European institutions. That context tends to sharpen the questions delegates ask in committee. The high school level designation also matters. Secondary school MUN circuits in Central and Eastern Europe have grown denser in recent years, and a conference of this scale offers younger delegates a chance to engage with serious policy questions on the ground rather than from a distance. The intimate delegate count keeps debate from becoming performative. For circuits that often gravitate toward the largest conferences in the calendar, smaller convenings like this one fill an important developmental role. They give chairs more room to coach, and they let delegates make mistakes without those mistakes being amplified across hundreds of observers.

How to prepare

Delegates preparing for this conference should treat it as an opportunity to refine fundamentals rather than to chase awards. The compact size means that every intervention will be noticed, which rewards delegates who arrive with a clear sense of their country's actual position rather than a generic talking-points memo. Reading recent statements from the foreign ministry of one's assigned country, rather than relying on encyclopedia summaries, will pay off quickly. Because the conference is held in Poland and draws heavily from European secondary school circuits, delegates from outside the region should expect committee debate to engage seriously with European Union dynamics, Eastern Partnership questions, and the war in Ukraine's ongoing diplomatic spillover. Familiarity with how these files are framed inside European chancelleries, not just inside the UN press room, will help. Fee structure and the individual application route on MyMUN suggest the conference is accessible to delegates traveling without a full institutional delegation. That has implications for prep: solo delegates should invest extra time in pre-conference outreach to identify likely bloc partners, since the social scaffolding that travels with a school team will not be there by default. Finally, the multi-day format is long enough to develop substantive resolutions but short enough that procedural delay tactics will burn precious committee time. Delegates who arrive with draft clauses already sketched, rather than waiting to negotiate from scratch, will shape the paper that ultimately gets voted on.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
high-school
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Dec 4, 2026 – Dec 6, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is eligible to attend this conference?

    The conference is designated for high school level delegates, making it appropriate for secondary school students building their MUN experience in a European setting.

  • Where is the conference held?

    It takes place in Wrocław, Poland, a Central European city with deep historical ties to questions of borders, treaties, and international institutions.

  • How large is the delegate cohort?

    The conference operates at a deliberately compact scale, which favors substantive committee work and gives individual delegates more speaking time than larger conferences typically allow.

  • Can individual delegates apply without a school delegation?

    Yes, the conference is listed on MyMUN with an individual application pathway, and the fee structure treats individual and team applicants on comparable terms.

  • What should delegates prioritize when preparing?

    Position research grounded in actual foreign ministry statements, familiarity with European diplomatic files, and pre-drafted clauses that can anchor resolution negotiations once committee opens.

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

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