Hi David, I think I follow your thinking, but I’m not hopeful that there is a viable route to “ending the community” or “ending community-building” or ending people “identifying as EAs”, even if a slight majority agreed it was desirable, which seems unlikely.
On the other hand, I vary much agree that a single Oxford or US-based organisation can’t “own” and control the whole of effective altruism, and aiming not for a “perfect supertanker” but a varied “fleet” or “regatta” of EA entities would be preferable, and much more viable. Then supervision and gatekeeping and checks could be done in a single timezone, and the size of EA entities and groups could be kept at 150 or less. Also different EA regions or countries or groups could develop different strengths.
We’d end up with a confederation, rather like Oxfam, the Red Cross, Save the Children etc. (It’s not an accident that the federated movements often have a head office in the Netherlands or Switzerland, where the laws on what NGOs/charities can and can’t do are more flexible than in the UK or USA, which is kinda helpful for an ‘unusual’ movement like EA.)
Oxfam themselves also formed INTRAC as a training entity, and one could imagine CEA doing something similar, offering training in (for example) - lessons learned - bringing in MEv trainers for evaluation training - PLA trainers for participatory budgeting etc.
Hi David, I think I follow your thinking, but I’m not hopeful that there is a viable route to “ending the community” or “ending community-building” or ending people “identifying as EAs”, even if a slight majority agreed it was desirable, which seems unlikely.
On the other hand, I vary much agree that a single Oxford or US-based organisation can’t “own” and control the whole of effective altruism, and aiming not for a “perfect supertanker” but a varied “fleet” or “regatta” of EA entities would be preferable, and much more viable. Then supervision and gatekeeping and checks could be done in a single timezone, and the size of EA entities and groups could be kept at 150 or less. Also different EA regions or countries or groups could develop different strengths.
We’d end up with a confederation, rather like Oxfam, the Red Cross, Save the Children etc. (It’s not an accident that the federated movements often have a head office in the Netherlands or Switzerland, where the laws on what NGOs/charities can and can’t do are more flexible than in the UK or USA, which is kinda helpful for an ‘unusual’ movement like EA.)
Oxfam themselves also formed INTRAC as a training entity, and one could imagine CEA doing something similar, offering training in (for example)
- lessons learned
- bringing in MEv trainers for evaluation training
- PLA trainers for participatory budgeting etc.