I’ve been listening to Givewell’s audio recordings, including phone conversations and board meetings. I found they included some non-textual clues to the attitudes Givewell stakeholders have, that I didn’t pick up on from other documents. An important downside is that the relevance of the audio, since it doesn’t get updated and there aren’t many of the files (and they’re old!). Never-the-less, there are a number of hours of content that make a ready substitute for banal podcasts.
In one of them, the cofounder associated with the Open Philanthropy Project mentioned that he viewed Open Borders as a politically intractable problem. On another document elsewhere, there are mentions of an organisation that does policy work called the Center for Global Development. They identify that there are no international conventions to facilitate Governments to accept environmental refugees. I like the way they frame the issue as something Governments would want to do, if they could (presumably, they would be held to the status quo by the populace as things stand). Anyhow, I looked up whether my own Australian government has mechanisms to facilitate them based on domestic law, and we don’t. This is concerning given our place in the pacific and climate change.
I just wanted to point out that climate change may precipitate greater support for environmental refugee migration. If the definition for environmental refugees overlaps with the existing definition of economic refugees, which are currently frowned upon unless they offer specific skills the host country wants, then there may be more a timely opportunity to advocate for open borders. I decided to post this because seeing opportunities (effective altruism) in threats (climate change) pushes my buttons on both strategy and optimism fronts, and hopefully does something for you too, reader.
2. Overcame some rationalisation over spatial-focalising (could someone word that better?)
Why does the EA forums post from Givewell about overseas giving > local giving quote a $10 figure for bednets, while the otherwise identical article on givewell [quote](www.givewell.org/giving101/Your-dollar-goes-further-overseas] $5? In any case, I wanted to mention that this seemingly minor article has made EA about +3% more important to me, from a pie of 100% importance while in a my baseline mental state. I’d say EA is about 6% of my total interest in things in that state. I wanted to point out how much impact that article has on me cause I suspect it’s undervalued how much local interests may dominate a person’s concerns and be the underlying feature being protected in hesitation to be more EA.
3. Started thinking about an EA metaevaluator
80000 ought to give survey respondents gift vouchers for EA charities to get them started and so they didn’t actually lose money on the process (they pay out more than the price of their advice). Far out. Maybe we need an EA organisation evaluation. Who will watch the watchmen?
4. Shifted health research priority setting paradigms
Many developing countries lack evidence-based processes to inform health spending allocations. For example, India subsidizes open heart surgery while child vaccination rates remain low; Egypt spent a fifth of its health budget to send a few fortunate people overseas for medical care while one-of-five children were stunted. CGD’s Priority-Setting Institutions for Global Health working group proposed in >a 2012 report the creation of a new institution to support developing countries and donors in making better-informed resource allocation decisions for healthcare. In March 2014, the UK’s Department for International Development and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, drawing on technical support from CGD, announced their support for the creation of the newInternational Decision Support Initiative (iDSI) led by NICE International
-The Centre for Global Development (CGDev)
The coming generation of priority setting institutions focus on cost-effectiveness research—econometrics.
Then what do we need? Is it institutions that focus on outreach to the public enroute to policy-makers?
CGDev isn’t stupid. They got a GiveWell grant, and they invented Advanced Market Commitments. For those who don’t know:
Before CGD’s Making Markets for Vaccines working group convened, pharmaceutical companies had little incentive to invest in the development of vaccines for diseases primarily affecting low-income countries. The working group, co-chaired by Ruth Levine, designed a new approach called Advance Market Commitments, under which donors promise to buy a vaccine against a specific disease when and if such a vaccine is developed.
I presume that it isn’t the cost-effectiveness that’s a problem, nor communication of the research. I mean, in terms of that they lay it right out for American political candidates. It’s a shame no organisation does anything similar for Australia, or makes a government neutral guide.
So, I suspect it’s the very fact that evaluation of development isn’t conducted at all many times. Not enough data collection, more than enough data analysts! What a funny thing when people forsee a shortage in data analysts, but all that big data is about how to sell more packs of smokes and such.
CGDev is leading the charge in closing the gap and making replication in development science more prestigious.
it seems. I love the eloquent way they frame the problem. And here’s a nice video to make it easy to understand. I wonder, then, why there is a shortage of places in international development for volunteers to go and do things. Perhaps an organisation could be created to recruit locals and foreigners to collect data as attaches to other organisations. I’ll explore what already exists shortly. I suspect my recent productivity is due to a bit of hypomania and I ought to spend more time on padding myself for the coming depression, than doing all this EA stuff. I won’t be able to have a big impact if I kill myself...
1. Became more optimistic
I’ve been listening to Givewell’s audio recordings, including phone conversations and board meetings. I found they included some non-textual clues to the attitudes Givewell stakeholders have, that I didn’t pick up on from other documents. An important downside is that the relevance of the audio, since it doesn’t get updated and there aren’t many of the files (and they’re old!). Never-the-less, there are a number of hours of content that make a ready substitute for banal podcasts.
In one of them, the cofounder associated with the Open Philanthropy Project mentioned that he viewed Open Borders as a politically intractable problem. On another document elsewhere, there are mentions of an organisation that does policy work called the Center for Global Development. They identify that there are no international conventions to facilitate Governments to accept environmental refugees. I like the way they frame the issue as something Governments would want to do, if they could (presumably, they would be held to the status quo by the populace as things stand). Anyhow, I looked up whether my own Australian government has mechanisms to facilitate them based on domestic law, and we don’t. This is concerning given our place in the pacific and climate change.
I just wanted to point out that climate change may precipitate greater support for environmental refugee migration. If the definition for environmental refugees overlaps with the existing definition of economic refugees, which are currently frowned upon unless they offer specific skills the host country wants, then there may be more a timely opportunity to advocate for open borders. I decided to post this because seeing opportunities (effective altruism) in threats (climate change) pushes my buttons on both strategy and optimism fronts, and hopefully does something for you too, reader.
2. Overcame some rationalisation over spatial-focalising (could someone word that better?)
Why does the EA forums post from Givewell about overseas giving > local giving quote a $10 figure for bednets, while the otherwise identical article on givewell [quote](www.givewell.org/giving101/Your-dollar-goes-further-overseas] $5? In any case, I wanted to mention that this seemingly minor article has made EA about +3% more important to me, from a pie of 100% importance while in a my baseline mental state. I’d say EA is about 6% of my total interest in things in that state. I wanted to point out how much impact that article has on me cause I suspect it’s undervalued how much local interests may dominate a person’s concerns and be the underlying feature being protected in hesitation to be more EA.
3. Started thinking about an EA metaevaluator
80000 ought to give survey respondents gift vouchers for EA charities to get them started and so they didn’t actually lose money on the process (they pay out more than the price of their advice). Far out. Maybe we need an EA organisation evaluation. Who will watch the watchmen?
4. Shifted health research priority setting paradigms
The coming generation of priority setting institutions focus on cost-effectiveness research—econometrics.
We don’t need more cost-effectiveness research, according to Givewel. I tell you, this hits me hard, personally. Sunk costs.
Then what do we need? Is it institutions that focus on outreach to the public enroute to policy-makers?
CGDev isn’t stupid. They got a GiveWell grant, and they invented Advanced Market Commitments. For those who don’t know:
I presume that it isn’t the cost-effectiveness that’s a problem, nor communication of the research. I mean, in terms of that they lay it right out for American political candidates. It’s a shame no organisation does anything similar for Australia, or makes a government neutral guide.
So, I suspect it’s the very fact that evaluation of development isn’t conducted at all many times. Not enough data collection, more than enough data analysts! What a funny thing when people forsee a shortage in data analysts, but all that big data is about how to sell more packs of smokes and such.
CGDev is leading the charge in closing the gap and making replication in development science more prestigious.
it seems. I love the eloquent way they frame the problem. And here’s a nice video to make it easy to understand. I wonder, then, why there is a shortage of places in international development for volunteers to go and do things. Perhaps an organisation could be created to recruit locals and foreigners to collect data as attaches to other organisations. I’ll explore what already exists shortly. I suspect my recent productivity is due to a bit of hypomania and I ought to spend more time on padding myself for the coming depression, than doing all this EA stuff. I won’t be able to have a big impact if I kill myself...