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Beginner Delegate Workshop. What is the UN ?. United Nations: An organization of independent states formed in 1945 to promote international peace and security 193 Member states. What is an MUN?. Model United Nations Learn UN procedures Reflect about current world issues
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What is the UN ? • United Nations: An organization of independent states formed in 1945 to promote international peace and security • 193 Member states
What is an MUN? • Model United Nations • Learn UN procedures • Reflect about current world issues • Meet people from around the world • Have fun • ARMUN, LMUNA,
General Assembly • Contains all member states • International issues • Meets in many yearly sessions and covers a wide variety of topics • Resolutions passed Security Council
Security Council • VETO Countries: USA, China, Russia, UK, France • Permanent and elected members • Immediate action
Human Rights Council • Ensures the protection of Human Rights • Deals with Human Rights violations • Tries to improve global living conditions
Crisis Council • Solving ongoing issues • Deals with challenging crisis that involve the world as a whole • Mystery Crisis
Special Conference 1 • Only in MUNs • Follows the MUN theme • ARMUN Take a Change
What Are You? A representative of a nation/country/NGO i.e. “The delegat(e)/ion of (insert here)”
Research? What Research? • Your country • Committee topics • Chair Reports • Beginner Delegate Booklet • Websites: • United Nations Website • CIA World Factbook • ARMUN Website: www.armun.nl • Google it…
Beginner Delegate Booklet • To help you prepare for ARMUN • Can be found on the ARMUN website or on the Teletop ARMUN course • Contains: • Chair Reports from each committee • Schedule • Rules • Debate procedures
Policy Statement A brief statement in your country’s point of view on the issues in your committee • PI: Talk about the issue and recent events relating to it • PII: Current circumstances concerning the topic and any recent action taken by the UN, member states, NGOs, etc. • PIII: Outline how your country would like to resolve any problems, concerns, or conflicts related to that topic. *Find example in your booklets
Resolution: In the Making • The foundation on which every UN action is based • A statement made by a committee expressing their desire to change a situation • Your basis for discussion • Can be submitted by a nation or NGO • 3 Parts: • Heading • Perambulatory Clauses • Operative Clauses *Find example in your booklets
Heading • Forum: (e.g. ECOSOC, Security Council, etc.) • Question: (The issue the resolution is about) • Submitter: (e.g. Your country) • Co-Submitters: (Other countries supporting you)
Preambulatory Clauses • Introductory sentences basically describing what the submitter considers the problem is and your thoughts about it • Take no action • Not numbered • Each clause must begin with a word from the list of Perambulatory clause words. *Find list in your booklets
Operative Clauses • Focus of debate: Each clause addresses a particular aspect of the issue • Take action • Numbered • Stay concrete and rational: When calling for certain action, explain briefly how it should be carried out • Each clause must begin with a word from the list of operative clause words. • Each clause ends with semi-colon (;), though the last clause ends with a full stop (.) *Find list in your booklets
Debate Procedure Do what the chair tells you to do! • Opening by chair (Introduction: Remember who they are!) • Roll Call (Say “Here” or “Present” when your country is called ) • Agenda (What you’re going to do for the day!) • Reading out operative clauses of chosen resolution and speech by main submitter • Debate, speeches, questions, amendments, etc. • Voting • Repeat 4-6 for next resolution • Closing *For further details, yes that’s right, look in your booklet
Amendments • Submitted by delegations wishing to change/add/strike clauses in resolutions
Note Passing • Definition: Admin • Can only be written on official note passing paper (Country specific) • Suspended during voting procedures • Censored by Admin • Can be suspended indefinetly if chairs think it is too distracting for delegates
Positions (Food Chain) The Boss: Secretary General Sidekicks: Board of Directors Staff : Heads of Security, Tech, Press etc. Superiors: Chairs/Co-chairs Delegates (That’s You…) Admins (MYP2)
PointsA question • Point of information • Question addressed to speaker who has the floor • Point of personal privilege • Your own well being • Point of order • When you need an explanation on procedures from the chair
Things to Remember • There’s no “I” in delegate • “I think” “The delegation of… thinks” • No personal pronouns!!! • When starting a speech (you have the floor), you must always address the chair and the house first!!! • “Honorable chair, fellow delegates, …” • Pay attention (The chair might suddenly decide to call up non-volunteers…) • Listen to the Chair and do what they tell you to do (If that means doing push ups in a corner, then so be it!)
MUN Lingo • Abstention • Amendment • Closed/Open debate • Delegate • Floor • House • Lobbying • NGO • Objection • Operative Clause • Perambulatory • Placard • Resolution • Yield • Motions (not applicable in ARMUN)
I Hope You Learned Something Any Questions?