The Role of the Chair
What it means to chair a Model UN committee — responsibilities, authority, and the balance between neutrality and leadership.
What Does the Chair Do?
The chair is the presiding officer of a Model UN committee. They manage all formal proceedings: recognizing speakers, maintaining the speakers' list, calling for votes, and enforcing rules of procedure. But the role goes far beyond procedural management.
A great chair shapes the committee experience. They set the tone in the opening session, guide debate toward productive topics when it stalls, and ensure that every delegate — not just the loudest ones — has a chance to participate. The chair is simultaneously a referee, a facilitator, and a leader.
The most important principle is neutrality. The chair never takes a substantive position on the topic. You can ask probing questions, redirect unproductive debate, and encourage delegates to address gaps in their proposals — but you cannot advocate for a particular solution.