Celebrating EAGxLatAm and EAGxIndia

In the first two weeks of January, we had the first EA conferences to take place in Latin America and India: EAGxLatAm in Mexico City and EAGxIndia in Jaipur, Rajasthan.

Lots of EAGx events happen every year, and we don’t usually post about each one. But I think these events are particularly special as two of the largest EA conferences to take place in LMICs (Low and Middle Income Countries) and the first ever in each region. So, I wanted to share a bit more about how they went.

Tl;DR: they went well.

EAGxLatinAmerica

EAGxLatAm was organised by community builders from the Spanish-speaking EA community with support from CEA. Over 200 people attended the event: ~32% of attendees came from within Mexico, ~13% from the US, ~12% from Colombia, ~7% from Brazil, ~5% from Chile and ~5% from Spain. There were also attendees from several other countries including Argentina, Peru, the Philippines, Canada, and countries in Europe.

The event hosted talks in English, Spanish, and Portuguese and attendees could mark on their name badges which languages they spoke. Sessions included:

  • A talk on the high-impact careers service, Carreras con Impacto;

  • A virtual Q&A with Toby Ord to discuss existential risks and the role of LMICs in tackling them;

  • Racionalidad para principiantes (Rationality for beginners) by Laura González Salmerón;

  • A panel on Riesgos Catastróficos Globales (Global Catastrophic Risks);

  • A panel on AI safety with staff from OpenAI, Redwood Research, CSER and Epoch;

  • A talk on Animal Welfare cause prioritisation by Daniela Romero Waldhorn (Rethink Priorities);

  • A talk by JPAL staff on ‘Applying evidence to reduce intimate partner violence’;

  • A talk on local cause prioritisation by Luis Mota (Global Priorities Institute);

  • A panel on EA in LMICs with EA community builders from Brazil, the Spanish-speaking community, the Philippines, Nigeria, South Africa, and EA Anywhere;

  • A talk by Vida Plena (a new organisation incubated by Charity Entrepreneurship focused on mental health in Latin America);

  • Meetups for attendees from Mexico, Chile/​Argentina, Colombia/​Perú, Brazil and Spain.

This photo looks staged but I think EAGxLatAm attendees were just actually this happy and interested

The event received a likelihood to recommend score of 9.07/​10[1] and attendees made an average of 9.37[2] new connections. Some quotes from the feedback survey I enjoyed reading:

  • “I had a 1-1 with someone else interested in nuclear security and nuclear winter research, and we’re developing an online reading group curriculum to [ideally] launch in March!”

  • “I got convinced on deciding to focus on [sic] direct work on ai safety by talking to [two other attendees].”

  • “I met Rob Wiblin at lunch and I didn’t recognize him.”

  • One attendee described the event to a CEA colleague as “the best weekend of their life”.

The event wasn’t perfect, of course. Several attendees reported that there was too much content in English that some attendees couldn’t follow, and some of the snacks and beverages seemed low quality. We hope to do even better next time!

My thanks to the one guy at the back for his stand-out enthusiasm

EAGxIndia

EAGxIndia was organised by community builders based in India[3] with support from CEA. 163 people attended: ~70% of attendees came from within India, ~9% from the UK and ~9% from the US. The rest came from Singapore, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Germany, and Brazil.

The sessions were all in English, and included:

  • A talk on South Asian Air Quality by Santosh Harish (Open Philanthropy);

  • An AI governance Q&A with Michael Aird (Rethink Priorities);

  • An update from the Fish Welfare Initiative, who are based in India;

  • A talk on AI safety research agendas and opportunities by Adam Gleave (FAR AI);

  • Two sessions led by Charity Entrepreneurship;

  • A workshop on what the EA community should look like in India, led by Indian community builders and CEA staff;

  • A talk mapping the farmed animal welfare space in India by Jayashima Nuggehalli (Global Food Partners);

  • A talk on biosecurity in Asia by Vorathep Sachdev;

  • A talk on Development economics, longtermism, and Indian economic growth by John Firth (Global Priorities Institute).

The event received a likelihood to recommend score of 8.77/​10[4] and attendees made an average of 12.36 new connections. This is the highest number of average new connections we’ve recorded at an EA Global or EAGx event. Some quotes from the feedback survey, which suggest some impactful connections took place:

  • I attended a talk by Michael Aird about AI Governance and the result was finding out new career opportunities within the AI policy and advocacy space.

  • Talk by Karolina about Charity Entrepreneurship was most valuable, as it has made me seriously consider applying for CE’s next incubation round, and even in general, made me consider starting my own organisation at some point, even if not now.

  • I met X who might be a good candidate for a job I’m hiring for.

For next time, we want to make sure that everyone can stay in comfortable accommodation (one hotel that lots of attendees stayed in was noticeably worse than the other) and probably ask the speakers to go more into detail (some attendees reported the talks as being too introductory or light on detail).

All extremely enthusiastic, excellent work

I’d like to give a huge shout-out and congratulations to the organising teams of these events.

  • For EAGxLatinAmerica, this was Sandra Malagón, Laura González Salmerón, Ángela Aristizábal, Hugo Ikta, Miriam Huerta, Miguel Alvarado, and many wonderful volunteers.

  • For EAGxIndia, this was Anubhuti Jain, Pratik Agarwal, Dee Kathuria, Nihal Mohan, Harriet Patterson, Amalie Farestvedt, and many fantastic volunteers and advisors.

We (CEA) were already excited about supporting more events outside of EA hubs, especially in LMICs. These events make us even more excited that such events can produce a lot of value, and we’re looking forward to sharing more about our work supporting EA communities in LMICs.

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My thanks to Amy Labenz, Angelina Li, Will Fenning and many of the organisers listed above for their feedback on this post. My thanks to Oscar Howie for suggesting I post this.

  1. ^

    This is higher than any EA Global event in 2022 which were all between 9.01 and 9.03.

  2. ^

    This is higher than the average number of connections at EAG SF 2022 (8.56) and EAG DC 2022 (8.44), but lower than EAG London 2022 (9.52).

  3. ^

    There was one organiser from the UK and one from Norway who is on an exchange semester in India.

  4. ^

    This is lower than the EA Global events that took place in 2022 but higher than several other EAGx events from this year.