If you would like to see EA Organization Updates as soon as they come out, consider subscribing to this tag.
Some of the opportunities and job listings we feature in this update have (very) pressing deadlines (see High Impact Professionals’ Impact Accelerator Program, job opportunities at Open Philanthropy for Grants Associates, and an opening for a Communications Project Manager at the Good Food Institute).
These monthly posts originated as the “Updates” section of the monthly EA Newsletter. Organizations submit their own updates, which we edit for clarity.
(If you’d like to share your updates and jobs via this series, please apply here.)
The Conference on Animal Rights in Europe (CARE) will be held virtually and in person in Warsaw from September 12-15. The conference aims to connect animal advocates to collaborators and key stakeholders. Apply here.
Apply by September 15 for the February-March 2025 round of the Charity Entrepreneurship Incubation Program.
Apply by September 15 for Ambitious Impact’s Founding to Give Program, a pre-incubator for for-profit businesses. The program provides support and co-founder networking in return for you donating 50% of your personal exit earnings above $1 million to effective charities.
Applications are now open for the Fall 2024 round of High Impact Professionals’ Impact Accelerator Program (IAP). Apply by September 5.
In January 2024, thanks to generous support from Animal Charity Evaluators’ Recommended Charity Fund, ACE awarded $1,394,955 to their 2023 Recommended Charities — their second-largest disbursement ever. Learn how these organizations have used their grants to help animals around the world in ACE’s Recommended Charity Fund: July 2024 Update.
Anima International
Anima International’s Polish team recently published a report looking into how Polish farmers see the future of food production. This is one of the steps Anima International is taking towards including farmers in the discussion about food system transformation. The data suggest that the agricultural sector will support alternatives to animal production as long as farmers see the potential for profit and stability. A summary of the report in English can be found here.
The Conference on Animal Rights in Europe (CARE) is taking place 12–15 September in Warsaw and online. CARE is an international conference that connects and inspires animal advocates from all across the globe — most notably in neglected regions, where the animal welfare movement has a shorter track record.
On September 19th Faunalytics will host Fauna Connections, a free, remote research symposium for animal advocates. Academics and scientists from the social and behavioral sciences and related disciplines will present original research that discusses the real-life implications and recommendations for animal advocacy. Register here.
Fish Welfare Initiative (FWI) launched a new study to identify the minimum levels of dissolved oxygen and maximum levels of ammonia that Indian major carps can tolerate without demonstrating welfare concerns. FWI believes this study will be useful for informing their current programming, which relies heavily on the assumption that certain levels of water quality parameters are serious sources of suffering for these animals.
Their farm program, the Alliance for Responsible Aquaculture has expanded to a new region. The program’s team currently works with 142 farms on stocking density caps and water quality monitoring, and they expect to expand it to about 200 farms by the year’s end.
GiveWell
GiveWell published a new blog post about their excess assets policy describing what happens if they receive more unrestricted donations than they need. See other blog posts here.
GiveWell also published several new grant pages, including:
A $197,000 grant to the Center for Global Development for a research project answering the question: “If the opportunities GiveWell funds are highly effective and relatively low cost, why aren’t they already funded by other groups focused on saving lives?”
A $1.48 million grant to Malaria Consortium to design and pilot a behavioral intervention to increase net use in Nigeria and Uganda, together with the Behavioural Insights Team.
Research Fellow Matt Clancy, who oversees Open Phil’s Innovation Policy program, was featured on two podcasts: The Entrepreneur’s Ethic and Macroscience.
They published a blog post on the success of the Open Wing Alliance’s corporate cage-free campaigns. You can subscribe to Open Philanthropy’s blog here.
Rethink Priorities
The Animal Welfare Department released the third installment in their Shrimp Welfare Sequence. This report quantifies pain caused by 18 welfare threats and will be followed by a prioritization analysis.
The Team also announced a new project focused on digital consciousness, which aims to produce a prototype model that translates uncertainty about sources of evidence on AI consciousness into probability ranges for existing and potential AI models.
The Surveys and Data Analysis Team published a post reporting on data about the personality psychology of EAs from the 2018 EA Survey.
EA Organization Updates: August 2024
If you would like to see EA Organization Updates as soon as they come out, consider subscribing to this tag.
Some of the opportunities and job listings we feature in this update have (very) pressing deadlines (see High Impact Professionals’ Impact Accelerator Program, job opportunities at Open Philanthropy for Grants Associates, and an opening for a Communications Project Manager at the Good Food Institute).
You can see previous updates on the “EA Organization Updates (monthly series)” topic page, or in our repository of past newsletters. Notice that there’s also an “org update” tag, where you can find more news and updates that are not part of this consolidated series.
These monthly posts originated as the “Updates” section of the monthly EA Newsletter. Organizations submit their own updates, which we edit for clarity.
(If you’d like to share your updates and jobs via this series, please apply here.)
Opportunities and jobs
Opportunities
Consider also checking opportunities listed on the EA Opportunity Board and the Opportunities to Take Action tag.
The Conference on Animal Rights in Europe (CARE) will be held virtually and in person in Warsaw from September 12-15. The conference aims to connect animal advocates to collaborators and key stakeholders. Apply here.
Apply by September 15 for the February-March 2025 round of the Charity Entrepreneurship Incubation Program.
Apply by September 15 for Ambitious Impact’s Founding to Give Program, a pre-incubator for for-profit businesses. The program provides support and co-founder networking in return for you donating 50% of your personal exit earnings above $1 million to effective charities.
Applications are now open for the Fall 2024 round of High Impact Professionals’ Impact Accelerator Program (IAP). Apply by September 5.
BlueDot Impact is offering a 12-week online course called Biosecurity Fundamentals: Pandemics for people interested in creating a pandemic-free world. Apply by September 15 to attend as a student or to become a Biosecurity Teaching Fellow.
Job listings
​​Consider also exploring jobs listed on the Job listing (open) tag. For even more roles, check the 80,000 Hours Job Board.
80,000 Hours
Advisor (London or Remote), ÂŁ66K+, apply by September 2nd)
Head of Video (London or Remote, ÂŁ80K, apply by August 25th)
Anima International
Media Communications Specialist (Remote, PLN 6.4K–11.9K, apply by September 8th)
Campaigner for Chicken Welfare (Hybrid in Copenhagen, DKK 26.5K–40K, apply by September 1st)
Centre for Effective Altruism (CEA)
Head of Operations (Remote, £107.4K /​ $179.9K, apply by September 16th)
GiveDirectly
Data Engineer (Remote, $130K)
Data Engineer (Contractor) (Remote, $100K)
Senior Manager, Accounting (Remote in US, $109.2K)
Senior Software Engineer (Remote with East Africa time zone overlap), Kenya $92.5K, US $157.5K, ÂŁ108.1K)
GiveWell
Senior Accountant (Remote in US, $114.8K–126.6K)
Head of Operations (Remote in US or international, $264.3K–$294.7K)
Giving What We Can
Senior Community and Growth Manager—Canada (Remote in Canada, CAD $85.7K–$103.1K, apply by September 6th)
Lead Exposure Elimination Project
Operations Associate (Remote, London preferred), £30K–£35K, apply by August 25th)
Open Philanthropy
Grants Associates (Remote, $112.7K, apply by August 24th)
Operations Team Expression of Interest (Washington, DC, or San Francisco, CA), $99.6K–101K)
If you’re interested in working at Open Philanthropy but don’t see an open role that matches your skillset, express your interest!
Rethink Priorities
We have an interdisciplinary team and are constantly in search of talent that can add to our team’s skill set. Please submit this expression of interest if you are interested in working with us.
The Good Food Institute
Associate Director of Philanthropy (Singapore)
People & Culture Specialist (Singapore)
Communications Project Manager (Remote in US, $74.5K–$77.5K, apply by August 21st)
Senior Fellow, Regional Bioeconomies (Remote in US, $112.1K–$117.7K, apply by August 28th)
Part-time Research Fellow (Contractor) (Remote in US, $30 per hour, apply by August 22nd)
Organization updates
The organization updates are in alphabetical order (0-A-Z).
80,000 Hours
80,000 released updates to their problem profile on preventing an AI-related catastrophe and their article on whether you should work at a frontier AI company.
They also released blog posts about their top resources for handling mental health issues in your career and why Orwell would hate AI.
On the 80,000 Hours Podcast, Luisa interviewed:
Sella Nevo on who’s trying to steal frontier AI models, and what they could do with them
Sihao Huang on the risk that US–China AI competition leads to war
Annie Jacobsen on what would happen if North Korea launched a nuclear weapon at the US
And Rob interviewed:
Vitalik Buterin on defensive acceleration and how to regulate AI when you fear government
Animal Charity Evaluators
In January 2024, thanks to generous support from Animal Charity Evaluators’ Recommended Charity Fund, ACE awarded $1,394,955 to their 2023 Recommended Charities — their second-largest disbursement ever. Learn how these organizations have used their grants to help animals around the world in ACE’s Recommended Charity Fund: July 2024 Update.
Anima International
Anima International’s Polish team recently published a report looking into how Polish farmers see the future of food production. This is one of the steps Anima International is taking towards including farmers in the discussion about food system transformation. The data suggest that the agricultural sector will support alternatives to animal production as long as farmers see the potential for profit and stability. A summary of the report in English can be found here.
The Conference on Animal Rights in Europe (CARE) is taking place 12–15 September in Warsaw and online. CARE is an international conference that connects and inspires animal advocates from all across the globe — most notably in neglected regions, where the animal welfare movement has a shorter track record.
GiveDirectly
GiveDirectly has appointed Nick Allardice as their new President and CEO. Allardice previously served as the head of the global activism platform Change.org and advised Open Philanthropy on mobilizing support for lead poisoning eradication.
Also, here are highlights from the AMA with Beast Philanthropy.
Faunalytics
On September 19th Faunalytics will host Fauna Connections, a free, remote research symposium for animal advocates. Academics and scientists from the social and behavioral sciences and related disciplines will present original research that discusses the real-life implications and recommendations for animal advocacy. Register here.
The organization has published their mid-year report and released the second edition of their Tactics in Practice series: The Science of Plant-Based Defaults and Nudges. Additionally, Faunalytics updated their Research Library with articles on a variety of animal advocacy topics including bottom trawling’s impact on climate change and AI techniques in toxicology research.
Fish Welfare Initiative
Fish Welfare Initiative (FWI) launched a new study to identify the minimum levels of dissolved oxygen and maximum levels of ammonia that Indian major carps can tolerate without demonstrating welfare concerns. FWI believes this study will be useful for informing their current programming, which relies heavily on the assumption that certain levels of water quality parameters are serious sources of suffering for these animals.
Their farm program, the Alliance for Responsible Aquaculture has expanded to a new region. The program’s team currently works with 142 farms on stocking density caps and water quality monitoring, and they expect to expand it to about 200 farms by the year’s end.
GiveWell
GiveWell published a new blog post about their excess assets policy describing what happens if they receive more unrestricted donations than they need. See other blog posts here.
GiveWell also published several new grant pages, including:
A $197,000 grant to the Center for Global Development for a research project answering the question: “If the opportunities GiveWell funds are highly effective and relatively low cost, why aren’t they already funded by other groups focused on saving lives?”
A $1.48 million grant to Malaria Consortium to design and pilot a behavioral intervention to increase net use in Nigeria and Uganda, together with the Behavioural Insights Team.
A grant of up to $4.8 million to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine for a randomized trial measuring the effect of the provision of eyeglasses for working age adults with near-vision impairments in India and Kenya on household consumption and vision-related quality of life.
New Incentives
New Incentives published a new photo blog, A Day in the Life of Hauwa Ibrahim, a Mother from Kwamarawa Village, which provides a glimpse into the life of the caregivers they serve and the challenges caregivers face in getting their children vaccinated.
Open Philanthropy
Research Fellow Matt Clancy, who oversees Open Phil’s Innovation Policy program, was featured on two podcasts: The Entrepreneur’s Ethic and Macroscience.
They published a blog post on the success of the Open Wing Alliance’s corporate cage-free campaigns. You can subscribe to Open Philanthropy’s blog here.
Rethink Priorities
The Animal Welfare Department released the third installment in their Shrimp Welfare Sequence. This report quantifies pain caused by 18 welfare threats and will be followed by a prioritization analysis.
The Worldview Investigations Team launched the Charitable Resource Allocation Frameworks and Tools (CRAFT) Sequence, which introduces two tools they developed to help donors work through uncertainties: a giving portfolio builder and a moral parliament simulation.
The Team also announced a new project focused on digital consciousness, which aims to produce a prototype model that translates uncertainty about sources of evidence on AI consciousness into probability ranges for existing and potential AI models.
The Surveys and Data Analysis Team published a post reporting on data about the personality psychology of EAs from the 2018 EA Survey.
Senior Researcher Greer Gosnell published her perspective on approaches to climate change research in EA.
The Humane League
The Humane League (THL) continues to leverage their 2024 Cage-free Eggsposé (with results!) to hold major restaurant brands accountable to their promises to phase cruel battery cages out of their supply chains by 2025. To date, 14 companies — including Carl’s Jr, Dine Brands, and Rubio’s Coastal Grill — have reported progress or fulfilled their pledges.
Globally, the Open Wing Alliance (OWA) has escalated their campaign against the iconic mayonnaise producer Kewpie. Over 43,000 advocates have signed the OWA’s petition, calling on Kewpie to make a global commitment that is in line with industry standards.
The OWA also released their first ever report on progress made to improve the lives of chickens raised for meat, who are subject to some of the worst conditions on factory farms, like inhumane slaughter and being bred to grow so large so quickly their bodies fail beneath them.