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For MUN delegates · Conference prep · Competitive debate

Research less. Understand more.

Model Diplomat gives MUN delegates sourced country research, structured position papers, and debate simulations — so you walk into committee actually prepared.

90,000+

Delegates on the platform

193

Countries in the database

10 min

Avg. position paper draft time

Sound familiar?

01

You're assigned a country you've never heard of

The clock starts the moment your committee assignment drops. Finding accurate, sourced information on that country's position in hours instead of days is the difference between being ready and being lost.

02

Generic AI makes things up

ChatGPT will confidently produce a position paper citing UN Resolution 1234/56 that doesn't exist. You trust it. Your chair Googles it. That's a problem.

03

You don't know what you don't know

Bloc dynamics, procedural strategy, what the P5 actually care about — the stuff that wins Best Delegate isn't always in the background guide. You need context, not just facts.

What you get.

Cited research from primary sources

Ask Model Diplomat anything about your country's position. Every answer cites UN documents, government statements, and verified geopolitical sources — nothing fabricated.

Position paper drafts that follow the format

Structured drafts built on real policy. Model Diplomat knows what a position paper looks like — introduction, country position, proposed solutions. Edit it, make it yours.

Debate simulations that push back

Practice against AI that argues real country positions. It won't let you win easy — it challenges weak arguments and calls out unsupported claims.

Courses on geopolitics and diplomacy

Bite-sized lessons on how the UN works, what blocs care about, how to read a resolution, and how diplomatic negotiations actually happen.

Every country's actual position

193 country profiles with foreign policy positions, voting history, bloc alignments, and key policy priorities — all from verified sources.

Research in minutes, not hours

Stop spending the whole night before conference reading Wikipedia. Model Diplomat does the research; you do the strategy.

Common questions.

Will my chair know I used AI?

Model Diplomat helps you research and understand your country's position. The knowledge is real, the sources are real — you're expected to understand what you submit, not just paste it. That's the same standard as using any research tool.

Is the information up to date?

Model Diplomat is trained on verified geopolitical sources and updated regularly. For very recent events (last few weeks), check supplementary news sources as well.

Does it work for crisis committees?

Yes. Model Diplomat understands crisis mechanics, directive writing, and portfolio powers. The research tools work for any committee format.

Is it free?

The free tier covers AI research, country profiles, and intro lessons. Pro unlocks unlimited searches, deeper analysis, and all course content.

Your next conference. Actually prepared.

Stop cramming the night before. Start researching in minutes, not hours. Free to sign up.

No credit card · Works on any device · Free tier always available

Live example for MUN delegates

See it answer a real question.

Every Model Diplomat answer cites real primary sources. Nothing fabricated.

What is Brazil's position on UN Security Council reform?

Brazil is a long-standing advocate for UN Security Council reform, specifically pushing for expansion of permanent seats. Brazil coordinates with the G4 group (Brazil, Germany, India, Japan) and aligns with the African Union's Ezulwini Consensus position calling for two permanent African seats with full veto rights.1

Brazil's case rests on a structural argument: the current Council composition reflects 1945 geopolitics, not the 21st-century order. Brazil is the 9th-largest economy globally and one of the top historical contributors to UN peacekeeping — and has no permanent representation.2

Brazil consistently votes in favor of the Intergovernmental Negotiations (IGN) framework and has resisted intermediate-model proposals (longer non-permanent terms without veto rights) as inadequate. Brazil's foreign ministry frames reform as a question of legitimacy, not just representation.3

Sources

1

Official Position on UN Security Council Reform

Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Brazil (Itamaraty)

Brazil's foreign policy supports an expansion of both permanent and non-permanent categories.

2

Troop and Police Contributors — Historical Tables

UN Department of Peace Operations

Cumulative contributions ranking, by country.

3

Co-Chairs' Report on Intergovernmental Negotiations on Security Council Reform

UN General Assembly (A/76/L.…)

Summary of national positions in the IGN process.

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I was able to finish my position paper in 10 minutes.
Ryaan Khan

Ryaan Khan

MUN Delegate