For the complete documentation index, see llms.txt.
Skip to main content
MUN/United Summit Georgia
United Summit Georgia
Part of the United Summit Georgia series

United Summit Georgia

Tbilisi, Georgia · high-school

📅 Add to calendar
Dates
Jun 26–2026 (day: 28)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
TBD
Language
English
Format
In-person
Apply / Learn more →

Summary

United Summit Georgia is a high-school Model UN conference convening in Tbilisi, positioned as an inaugural regional gathering for young leaders across the South Caucasus and beyond. Listed on mymun and hosted in the Georgian capital, it bills itself as the first summit of its kind for the region, framing the event as a debut platform rather than the continuation of an established circuit. The conference sets its sights on delegates from Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and further afield, using euro-denominated fees and an English-language application pipeline to signal an internationally oriented field. For students considering a summer Model UN in Eastern Europe or the Caucasus, it offers a chance to help define what a new regional flagship looks like from its first edition onward.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Tbilisi sits at a meaningful crossroads of European, Caucasian and broader Eurasian diplomacy, and any serious Model UN held there inherits some of that geographic weight. A high-school summit branded as the first regional united summit is therefore not just another date on the calendar - it is an attempt to plant a flag for South Caucasus youth diplomacy, in a part of the world where regional Model UN infrastructure is still comparatively thin. The inaugural framing matters for delegates strategically. First editions tend to draw smaller, more experimental committees, but they also offer outsized influence: the students who show up help define the conference's tone, its committee culture and the quality bar that future cohorts will be measured against. That can be a more rewarding environment for ambitious debaters than slotting into the back row of a long-established circuit. It also matters for schools in Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan that have historically had to travel to Western Europe or Turkey for high-profile English-language Model UN. A locally hosted summit reduces travel costs and visa friction for regional delegates while still inviting international participation, which can broaden access to the activity in a way single-country conferences rarely do.

How to prepare

Preparation should start with the assumption that this is a regional summit, not a purely Georgian one. Delegates ought to read into the foreign policy postures of Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in particular - their relationships with the EU, with Russia, with Turkey and with each other - because chairs at a Tbilisi-hosted debut are likely to choose agendas where those perspectives matter. Because this is a first edition, published study guides and past resolutions will be limited or non-existent. That puts more weight on independent research: primary UN documentation, recent Security Council and General Assembly debates on regional security, energy corridors and post-conflict reconstruction are all sensible starting points. Delegates who can ground their position papers in current UN reporting will stand out against peers relying on generic talking points. On the soft-skills side, expect a mixed-experience room. Some delegates will be seasoned MUNers from international schools; others may be attending their first English-language conference. Strong delegates at inaugural events tend to be those who can build coalitions across that experience gap rather than dominate from the front, and who treat the chairs' inexperience as an opportunity to model good committee behaviour rather than exploit procedural ambiguity. Finally, treat the summer timing as a planning constraint. Tbilisi in June is hot, the academic year in many participating countries is winding down, and applications, travel and any required visas need to be lined up well in advance of the conference window.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
high-school
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Jun 26, 2026 – Jun 28, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is United Summit Georgia aimed at?

    It is a high-school-level Model UN conference held in Tbilisi, Georgia, and positioned as a regional summit drawing young leaders from Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and other countries.

  • Is this an established conference with a long track record?

    No. It is explicitly billed as the first united summit of its kind in the region, so the Tbilisi edition is an inaugural rather than a returning event.

  • What currency are fees quoted in?

    Fees are quoted in euros, consistent with the conference's listing on the mymun platform and its international-facing positioning.

  • How should delegates prepare for a first-edition conference?

    Lean on primary UN sources and current reporting rather than past study guides, since a debut high-school summit in Tbilisi will not yet have an archive of resolutions or precedent committees to study.

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

Trusted outbound references