Position Paper Submission Procedure and Deadline
The DAYMUNC papers must be submitted in both WORD and PDF by the date assigned. The deadline for position papers is Friday, January 27, 2025, by 11:59 p.m. Your submission email must contain the following: Subject Line in the form of: \[Committee\] Position Paper for \[Country\] - \[School\]. Body of email must contain Committee Name, Country Name, School, and Delegate's name. The position paper file, attached as either a Microsoft Word (.doc) or Rich Text Format (.rtf) file and PDF (.pdf)
Delegates are strongly encouraged to prepare and submit position papers for the conference. A distinctive plaque is awarded each year for the best position paper submitted. All submissions will be blind evaluated prior to the conference, so there are some basic style details that must be followed. In addition, we are offering some suggestions to help ensure your submission is the best it can be.
DAYMUNC Position Paper style has changed to more closely match that of the NMUN Conference. Please visit NMUN Position Paper Guide for questions.
The following suggestions are offered to help guide your research and writing effort and are not the criteria for awards. Position papers serve to suggest how a Member State will act during the conference. They are necessarily prospective, forward looking, statements of national policy. Give your country’s formal name once and only in the first line of each topic–subsequently, the use of appropriate acronyms is acceptable. Position statements are generally expressed in plural first person but use care in your choice of verbs. For example, the government of a country can “know,” “value,” “think” or “believe” but it lacks the capacity to “feel.” Third person can also be used to provide sentence variety. It is a good idea to avoid using up space with flat facts (things like population, location, area, etc) as this information is readily available and really is not policy. It is not meaningful to provide historical accounts of what the country has done in the past. While historical policy may inform us of present policy, what is really desired are clear concise statements of what the county intends to do now and in the future. Thus, long lists of ratified treaties and supported resolutions waste precious space and should be avoided. The most important question a great position paper answers is what the country believes is the best solution to the problem being addressed. Think of it this way–if your country was authoring the working paper and could do anything it wanted, what would that be?
A variety of research aids are provided on this website in the resource area in addition to those provided in the background guides. Within that section you can find information regarding UN resolutions, general country information, NGO resources, and links to a variety of current events sources as well. New resources are being added regularly, so keep checking the site frequently. We hope these resources and suggestions will help you write an award winning paper.
Papers can be e-mailed as attachments to secgen.daymunc@gmail.com. A Word document (.doc) and PDF file (.pdf) is required.