ACE does not have immediate plans of running more original studies; while more research of that type is definitely needed, we’re currently focusing our efforts in that direction on encouraging other people to do it. Academic researchers and animal advocacy groups which perform the intervention under consideration as part of their usual activities seem to be better placed do do this type of study than ACE is, especially if both groups can work together. With more research staff, there’s a possibility that we would again take on this kind of work, but it’s not our first priority for what a new researcher would do.
We would expect a new researcher at least initially to do most of their work on the kinds of things I’ve been spending most of my time on, which are more reading/interviewing/writing based. There are more details available from the links above, and the specifics would depend on the candidate and their skills and interests, but working on our charity and intervention evaluations would probably be a major part of the job.
This is a very rough estimate, because we almost never put entire days into this kind of work, and because the boundaries between it and other work we do aren’t clear—I’m not sure what things to count, in some cases. But I would guess on the order of 10 person-days last year, and hoping to slightly increase the amount of time we spend on it in the future. We don’t have total control over how much time we spend on this, because other people need to also be interested in working with us.
ACE does not have immediate plans of running more original studies; while more research of that type is definitely needed, we’re currently focusing our efforts in that direction on encouraging other people to do it. Academic researchers and animal advocacy groups which perform the intervention under consideration as part of their usual activities seem to be better placed do do this type of study than ACE is, especially if both groups can work together. With more research staff, there’s a possibility that we would again take on this kind of work, but it’s not our first priority for what a new researcher would do.
We would expect a new researcher at least initially to do most of their work on the kinds of things I’ve been spending most of my time on, which are more reading/interviewing/writing based. There are more details available from the links above, and the specifics would depend on the candidate and their skills and interests, but working on our charity and intervention evaluations would probably be a major part of the job.
Roughly how many resources (person days) have you put into this, and how many do you plan to?
This is a very rough estimate, because we almost never put entire days into this kind of work, and because the boundaries between it and other work we do aren’t clear—I’m not sure what things to count, in some cases. But I would guess on the order of 10 person-days last year, and hoping to slightly increase the amount of time we spend on it in the future. We don’t have total control over how much time we spend on this, because other people need to also be interested in working with us.