Thank you for your post and for bringing up this topic! I am interested in systems change and I can probably give you some hints about what is being done there. I think there are many people in EA who are interested in systems change. I was a co-author to a forum post about systems change. There are EA groups that are interested in systems change as well. I do not “work” on systems change, but I volunteer in that field, so I am up for it! Lead Exposure Elimination Project is probably the best example. But we also have some EA organisations focusing on policies in fields like alcohol, tobacco, soda, sodium and also Global Policy Research Group. I am not sure if everything I list here is what you are looking for, but I will make a summary about each organisation.
I would say that One Day Health is a promising organisation since they are creating primary health care in a cost-effective way to fill in health delivery gaps. But I don’t know about “systems change” in that case. But I think it is quite a small step to systems change in that case.
Essential Emergency and Critical Care has a similar approach but focuses on critically ill patients. They have a Government led national programme, and they are cost-effective.
I know that State of Life made an impact report about Tearfund who is a Christian charity that mobilises churches for community transformation. I think they are quite cost-effective even if they are not EA.
Teaching at the Right Level Africa is one of the world’s most cost-effective programs for increasing children’s ability in mathematics, language, and literacy and it is promoted by The Life You Can Save. The program is used in over 18 countries, of which 17 are in Africa, reaching 7 million children, and one is India, reaching 76 million children. There are many other programmes at The Life You Can Save that might be into systems change.
We have multilayered programmes like Breakthrough Trust, which is a top charity according to The Life You Can Save. Breakthrough Trust combats violence against women and girls in India and creates changes in attitudes. The program works on several levels:
Collaboration with the government, which has included gender equality in the school curriculum and trained school staff and created mass media campaigns.
Training programs for volunteers and activists who change attitudes and norms in the local community and individual families / individuals.
Youth engagement by training young people in gender equality so that they can be youth leaders in schools and the local community.
Media engagement, where there are workshops and training for journalists on highlighting violence and sexual harassment in the media.
Influence groups that have strategic collaboration with various groups that drive gender equality issues to strengthen these groups.
Campaigns where young people have created events and campaigns where they highlight violence against women and online campaigns.
Because the program works at multiple levels and with different stakeholders, Breakthrough Trust has created a 76% reduction in intimate partner violence as well as positive changes in attitudes among boys and men regarding sexual harassment.
Strategic Alliance for a Viable Earth is an organization that matches experts with people in power so they make better decisions in various global problem areas. They have the same idea as you, about right people at the right moment, but they focus mostly on tipping points at the moment.
Cool Earth was a top charity before but not now. They support local and indigenous peoples to protect rainforests and combat the climate crisis. They use basic income for nature and climate—which means giving basic income to communities that protect rainforests and help them in different ways to empower these communities and save the rainforests.
Equal Right has the same approach as Cool Earth but also promotes a global basic income, global carbon tax, cap and share policy and global wealth tax. They are testing their ideas at the national level in countries with small populations. Their CEO knows what EA is but thinks systems change is better.
There are also organisations like the Social Change Lab that is EA-aligned and does research about social change and Initiative for Safeguarding Democracy that tries to find the best ways to protect democracy. There are organisations working on task-sharing in the field of global mental health. Strongminds, Friendship Bench and Vida Plena are some examples of this. Even if they are focused on direct delivery, task-sharing and their aim to make it part of national programmes might be helpful.
Other organisations that might be interesting but are not connected to EA (as far as I know) but focus on systems change are Odyssean Institute, Club of Rome, Earth4All and Global Commons Alliance.
I hope my comment is helpful! You are warmly welcome to DM me if you have further questions!
Thanks Ulf these are great examples! I will say though, At this stage us at OneDay Health are still growing and learning from our model—we’re not doing systems change yet but I hope we get there in the not so distant future!
Thank you, Nick! I am happy to hear that! I forgot GiveDirectly, that might be one of the more obvious organisations. They are thinking about trying the things in the picture and the link, which might be a step to systems change. We also have Fortify Health who enable access to micronutrient-rich wheat flour and works with both companies, NGO:s and governments. That is great, Nick! I have very much respect for your incredible work! I hope that you create systems change soon, because it is very important and seems like a project that can spread quickly and have massive impact.
I put the distinction between delivery and Systems change generally at affecting policy or research use at a district or national level. So with GiveDirectly their systems change work might be convincing governments or refugee work to give cash rather than in-kind items. Their direct giving though isn’t systems change under any rubriks, even if you pair it with other things.
Fortify health have more recently become serious about systems change and making fortification part of national policy in India.
I agree with you, and yes, I kind of missed the systems change part that GiveDirectly is doing. GiveDirectly works with the government in Malawi and Rwanda. They got 100 million in funding from Canva, which they use to implement cash transfers in an entire region in Malawi. Testing it in one district with 185 000 citizens + collaboration with the government is a good step towards systems change, since they can work in entire districts instead of villages. I also know that Equal Right is active in Malawi as well, and their end goal is global universal basic income. I think that GiveDirectly is collaborating with Cool Earth, Equal Right and other basic income organisations (they were invited to collaborate on a text we wrote). Even if this might not be “real systems change”, there are other variables as well. For example, GiveDirectly is used for benchmarking for comparing the impact of different charities and different types of aid, which means that they are inclined to show more impact than cash transfers. GiveDirectly also shifts power from a top-down perspective to a bottom-up perspective. So, I think it is much bigger than it seems.
Just because you work through government doesn’t make it systems change. Governments are usually happy to implement stuff if someone else is paying, then when the money dries up so does the work. I wouldn’t call their Malawi work systems change really.
What I would call systems change is their work convincing the UNHCR to give cash rather than food a lot of the time to refugees.
Hi Madeleine!
Thank you for your post and for bringing up this topic! I am interested in systems change and I can probably give you some hints about what is being done there. I think there are many people in EA who are interested in systems change. I was a co-author to a forum post about systems change. There are EA groups that are interested in systems change as well. I do not “work” on systems change, but I volunteer in that field, so I am up for it! Lead Exposure Elimination Project is probably the best example. But we also have some EA organisations focusing on policies in fields like alcohol, tobacco, soda, sodium and also Global Policy Research Group. I am not sure if everything I list here is what you are looking for, but I will make a summary about each organisation.
I would say that One Day Health is a promising organisation since they are creating primary health care in a cost-effective way to fill in health delivery gaps. But I don’t know about “systems change” in that case. But I think it is quite a small step to systems change in that case.
Essential Emergency and Critical Care has a similar approach but focuses on critically ill patients. They have a Government led national programme, and they are cost-effective.
I know that State of Life made an impact report about Tearfund who is a Christian charity that mobilises churches for community transformation. I think they are quite cost-effective even if they are not EA.
Teaching at the Right Level Africa is one of the world’s most cost-effective programs for increasing children’s ability in mathematics, language, and literacy and it is promoted by The Life You Can Save. The program is used in over 18 countries, of which 17 are in Africa, reaching 7 million children, and one is India, reaching 76 million children. There are many other programmes at The Life You Can Save that might be into systems change.
We have multilayered programmes like Breakthrough Trust, which is a top charity according to The Life You Can Save. Breakthrough Trust combats violence against women and girls in India and creates changes in attitudes. The program works on several levels:
Collaboration with the government, which has included gender equality in the school curriculum and trained school staff and created mass media campaigns.
Training programs for volunteers and activists who change attitudes and norms in the local community and individual families / individuals.
Youth engagement by training young people in gender equality so that they can be youth leaders in schools and the local community.
Media engagement, where there are workshops and training for journalists on highlighting violence and sexual harassment in the media.
Influence groups that have strategic collaboration with various groups that drive gender equality issues to strengthen these groups.
Campaigns where young people have created events and campaigns where they highlight violence against women and online campaigns.
Because the program works at multiple levels and with different stakeholders, Breakthrough Trust has created a 76% reduction in intimate partner violence as well as positive changes in attitudes among boys and men regarding sexual harassment.
Strategic Alliance for a Viable Earth is an organization that matches experts with people in power so they make better decisions in various global problem areas. They have the same idea as you, about right people at the right moment, but they focus mostly on tipping points at the moment.
Cool Earth was a top charity before but not now. They support local and indigenous peoples to protect rainforests and combat the climate crisis. They use basic income for nature and climate—which means giving basic income to communities that protect rainforests and help them in different ways to empower these communities and save the rainforests.
Equal Right has the same approach as Cool Earth but also promotes a global basic income, global carbon tax, cap and share policy and global wealth tax. They are testing their ideas at the national level in countries with small populations. Their CEO knows what EA is but thinks systems change is better.
There are also organisations like the Social Change Lab that is EA-aligned and does research about social change and Initiative for Safeguarding Democracy that tries to find the best ways to protect democracy. There are organisations working on task-sharing in the field of global mental health. Strongminds, Friendship Bench and Vida Plena are some examples of this. Even if they are focused on direct delivery, task-sharing and their aim to make it part of national programmes might be helpful.
Other organisations that might be interesting but are not connected to EA (as far as I know) but focus on systems change are Odyssean Institute, Club of Rome, Earth4All and Global Commons Alliance.
I hope my comment is helpful! You are warmly welcome to DM me if you have further questions!
Thanks Ulf these are great examples! I will say though, At this stage us at OneDay Health are still growing and learning from our model—we’re not doing systems change yet but I hope we get there in the not so distant future!
Thank you, Nick! I am happy to hear that! I forgot GiveDirectly, that might be one of the more obvious organisations. They are thinking about trying the things in the picture and the link, which might be a step to systems change. We also have Fortify Health who enable access to micronutrient-rich wheat flour and works with both companies, NGO:s and governments. That is great, Nick! I have very much respect for your incredible work! I hope that you create systems change soon, because it is very important and seems like a project that can spread quickly and have massive impact.
I put the distinction between delivery and Systems change generally at affecting policy or research use at a district or national level. So with GiveDirectly their systems change work might be convincing governments or refugee work to give cash rather than in-kind items. Their direct giving though isn’t systems change under any rubriks, even if you pair it with other things.
Fortify health have more recently become serious about systems change and making fortification part of national policy in India.
I agree with you, and yes, I kind of missed the systems change part that GiveDirectly is doing. GiveDirectly works with the government in Malawi and Rwanda. They got 100 million in funding from Canva, which they use to implement cash transfers in an entire region in Malawi. Testing it in one district with 185 000 citizens + collaboration with the government is a good step towards systems change, since they can work in entire districts instead of villages. I also know that Equal Right is active in Malawi as well, and their end goal is global universal basic income. I think that GiveDirectly is collaborating with Cool Earth, Equal Right and other basic income organisations (they were invited to collaborate on a text we wrote). Even if this might not be “real systems change”, there are other variables as well. For example, GiveDirectly is used for benchmarking for comparing the impact of different charities and different types of aid, which means that they are inclined to show more impact than cash transfers. GiveDirectly also shifts power from a top-down perspective to a bottom-up perspective. So, I think it is much bigger than it seems.
Yes, Fortify Health is doing a really good job! Family Empowerment Media is also expanding to other regions and countries, which is very nice to see!
Just because you work through government doesn’t make it systems change. Governments are usually happy to implement stuff if someone else is paying, then when the money dries up so does the work. I wouldn’t call their Malawi work systems change really.
What I would call systems change is their work convincing the UNHCR to give cash rather than food a lot of the time to refugees.