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851-0647-00L 3 Credits DS , DR D-GESS

Model United Nations - International Policy-Making

Lecturers & Examiners: Dr. Medinat Malefakis
VVZ CR n/a

Last Updated: 2026-06-03 00:14:16

Abstract

This course takes the UN as a starting point to acquaint students with key competences decisive for effective international policy-making to address the most pressing issues of humanity. These include intercultural negotiation, mediation and complex problem solving skills. Participants receive the opportunity to exchange with UN staff, diplomats and civil society members engaged with the UN.

Objective

Intercultural mediation, negotiation, complex problem solving, sustainable development goals and how those are addressed by the UN, team work

Content

Technical progress led to unprecedented opportunities and challenges for human societies. While we were never as affluent, educated and healthy as today - climate change, biodiversity loss, epidemics and widening inequality, as well as new risks from emerging technologies - such as lethal autonomous weapons and designed pathogens – pose novel challenges. Responding to these challenges requires not only profound technical knowledge but also a profound understanding of societies and the capacity to put technological solutions into practice in a globalized, intercultural and political environment. Thus, increasingly there is a need for engineers with a strong understanding of complex problem solving to address the most pressing challenges of human kind. This course takes the UN as a starting point to address complexity at international policy-making processes and to make students aware of the need for more sustainable solutions in the future. The work on real UN case studies will challenge students to critically assess global problems from different perspectives, to discuss UN resolutions brought forward and to reflect upon their potential implications. Opportunities to exchange with experts, such as UN staff, diplomats and civil society advisors will complement theoretic inputs. In this course, ETH students can complement their technical skills with key competences decisive for effective international policy-making.

General Information

Language
English
Levels
DS , DR

Examination

Type
graded semester performance

Registration & Places

Max Places
30

Course Components

Type Title Time & Place Hours
seminar Model United Nations - International Policy-Making
  • Tue 12:15-14:00 (LEE C 114)
18 h semesterly

Offered In