Delegation Overview
Topic Background
Country Policy
Proposed Solutions
Conclusion & Bibliography
100

Q: What three main areas about a country should be included in the Delegation Overview section?

A: Geography, economy, and political background.

100

Q: What is the purpose of the Topic Background section?


A: To summarize the issue and show understanding of what happened, who’s involved, and why it matters.

100

Q: What question does this section ALWAYS answer?
 

A: “What does my country want?”

100

Q: What writing format is recommended for solutions?
 

A: Bullet points.

100

Q: What is the main purpose of the Conclusion?

A: To summarize the stance and reaffirm the country’s commitment.

200

Q: What is one reason a country may be relevant to a committee’s topic?

A: Historical involvement, regional importance, or legal/diplomatic connections.

200

Q: Name one type of information you must explain: what happened, who was involved, or why it's an issue?


A: Any one of the three.

200

Q: What is one reason your country might “care” about the issue?


A: National interest, security, diplomacy, economics, regional ties, etc.

200

Q: What makes a solution “actionable”?


A: It includes specific steps, not vague ideas.

200

Q: Name one thing the conclusion should reaffirm.

A: Support for peace, justice, or ICC action.

300

Q: What type of history is specifically encouraged to include in this section? 

A: Any history connecting the country to the committee’s topic.

300

Q: Why must you explain how the issue relates to the committee?


A: To show the committee to which aspects it has jurisdiction or relevance.

300

Q: What should you include to show your country’s credibility on the issue?


A: Previous actions taken.

300

Q: Name one type of solution approach allowed in this section.
 

A: Military, humanitarian, legal, diplomatic, or economic.

300

Q: What type of sources are acceptable in the bibliography?

A: UN, ICC, HRW, Amnesty, Britannica, academic sources. 

400

Q: What are two types of background facts you must include about your country?
 

A: Key facts & political/diplomatic history.


400

Q: Name two items required in the Topic Background section.


A: Brief history, main actors, current situation, international relevance, crimes/treaties/legal actions.

400

Q: This section also explains what your country rejects. What does this mean for debate?


A: It tells what policies or solutions your country will NOT support.

400

Q: What creative technique is encouraged in MUN solutions?
 

A: Creating acronyms or named programs.

400

Q: What citation formats are acceptable unless the conference requires otherwise?
 

A: Any format (MLA/APA optional).

500

Q: This section must explain why your country matters to the issue. What is the term for this?

A: Relevance to the committee topic.

500

Q: What is the difference between “main actors” and “current situation”?


A: Main actors = who is involved; current situation = what is happening now.

500

Q: What are “principles your country follows,” and why are they required?


A: They are national values or legal doctrines that guide your country’s actions.

500

Q: What must all solutions be realistic for, according to the guide?
 

A: The ICC (or the specific committee).

500

Q: Why is including a bibliography crucial even if the format is flexible?


A: It proves the research is legitimate.

M
e
n
u