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AI research for Model UN

Walk into committee with the record at your back.

Your country's actual positions, sourced — then the position paper, the opening speech, the bloc strategy. Every claim traced to a UN document your chair can open.

Free to start · no card · every claim sourced
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Brazil is a long-standing advocate of Security Council reform, pushing expansion in both permanent and non-permanent categories. It coordinates with the G4 Brazil, Germany, India, Japan and engages the African Union's Ezulwini Consensus on permanent African seats. 12

The case is structural: the Council reflects 1945, not the 21st-century order. Brazil is among the top historical contributors to UN peacekeeping and has no permanent representation. 3

In committee terms: Brazil backs the Intergovernmental Negotiations framework and resists intermediate models longer non-permanent terms without veto rights framing reform as a question of legitimacy, not just representation. 45

How it works

One sourced workflow, start to final draft.

A position paper your chair can't poke holes in.

Country-accurate drafts in your committee's format, with every claim pinned to a treaty, vote, or official statement. Your chair opens the footnote — and it's real.

Explore position papers
Country brief — France · UNSC reform
Position

France backs expanding the Security Council in both categories, while keeping the veto for current permanent members.2 Paris has co-sponsored the G4 framework since 2004.3

On working methods, France supports voluntary veto-restraint in mass-atrocity situations.5

2
France — statement to the General Assembly
Primary · 2023
◆ Primaryconf. 0.96
Open source ↗
3
G4 joint statement on Council reform
Primary · 2004

Walk in knowing what moved overnight.

Discover is a sourced morning feed of what's actually happening — ceasefires, votes, rulings, sanctions. Five minutes at breakfast, and the crisis update doesn't surprise you.

Explore Discover
Discover · this morning
Today’s dispatchesSat 13 Jun 2026
Conflict & SecurityLive
IAEA inspectors regain partial access to Fordow
A narrow technical understanding restores cameras and limited visits — short of full safeguards.
7 sources·18 min ago
Diplomacy
Grain corridor talks resume in Istanbul
What's actually on the table this round, and which side moved first.
4 sources·2h
Trade & Sanctions
New designations target the shadow fleet
The legal basis for the listings — and where enforcement actually bites.
3 sources·5h

Five minutes a day. Years ahead in the room.

Short daily lessons on how power actually works — rules of procedure, caucusing, resolutions, crisis strategy — built by people who've chaired the room.

Explore Learn
Learn · Delegate track
Today · 5 min 12-day streak
Operative clauses that pass
Lesson 4 of 7 · Writing a resolution
Resume →
Rules of procedure8 lessons
Caucusing & blocs6 lessons
Writing a resolution7 lessons
Crisis strategy9 lessons
Public speaking5 lessons

Every conference, in its own place.

A Project per committee keeps research, drafts, and sources together — country brief, opening speech, draft resolution. Run GA prep and crisis prep at the same time.

Explore Projects
Projects
working
MUN — Geneva 2026
UNSC
Country brief — France ✓
Opening speech (GA)
Draft resolution
IB Extended Essay
Global Politics
Research — sourced
Outline ✓
First draft
working
Iran — regional power
Standing brief
Weekly update ✓
Watching: 3 files
Two briefs running at once while you prep the third.
The corpus

Built on the primary record — not the open web.

Model Diplomat reasons over the documents committees actually argue about — treaties, voting records, official statements. Every answer points back to one your chair can open.

Treaties & accordswith ratification records
UN voting recordsCouncil & Assembly
Declassified cablesdated & attributed
Case lawICJ & national courts
Official datasetstrade, conflict, development
Scholarshippeer-reviewed

From first conference to Best Delegate.

RyaanRyaanMUN Delegate

I finished my position paper in 10 minutes. Citations actually checked out.

EdwardEdwardCo-Director, UNA-NCA

Model Diplomat is an essential resource for modern MUN preparation. It helps students effectively research diplomatic positions while preserving the educational value of the experience.

CarstonCarston4× Best Delegate

An innovative tool that helps seasoned veterans and fresh beginners alike — easy to use interface and in-depth guides.

PrachiPrachiMUN Chair

When I chair my next MUN, I'll be only using Model Diplomat.

JeffJeffVeteran, UNA & TCF

I've tested out the site with a few historical UN questions, and am in awe of how it uses AI to speed research tasks.

AanyaAanyaSec-Gen, EpicCrisis MUN

I love it! The chair tools make running committees so much smoother.

Questions

What you’re wondering.

Model Diplomat helps you research and understand your country's position — the knowledge is real, the sources are real, and you're expected to understand what you submit, not paste it. That's the same standard as any research tool, and it's why conference organizers recommend it for preparation.
No. Model Diplomat is retrieval-first: it searches an index of treaties, UN votes, official statements, case law, and peer-reviewed work before it writes a word. It cannot cite a document that is not in its index — so when your chair Googles the footnote, it's there.
Country positions are built from the record — UN voting history, official ministry statements, treaty obligations, and bloc alignments — with country profiles covering all 193 member states. Even the niche delegations nobody wants.
Yes. Model Diplomat understands crisis mechanics, directive writing, and portfolio powers — and the research tools work for any committee format, from GA to historical crisis.
A sourced answer on your country's position takes seconds; a structured position paper draft takes about ten minutes. The point isn't to skip the work — it's to spend your night on strategy and speeches instead of hunting for documents.
There is a free tier for research, country profiles, and intro lessons — no card required. Pro is $20/month (or $144/year) with a monthly research budget metered by actual usage, plus plans for schools and teams.
Take your seat at the table

The gavel goes to the delegate who read it closely.

Pull your country's record, draft the paper, and walk into committee with answers you can defend — sourced, every line.

See it work

No card required · built on the primary record