A basic issue with a lot of deliberate philanthropy is the tension between:
In many domains, much of the biggest gains are likely to come from marginal opportunities. E.g. because they have more value of information, more large upsides, more addressing neglected areas (and therefore plausibly strategically important.
Marginal opportunities are harder to evaluate.
There’s less preexisting understanding, on the part of fund allocators.
The people applying would tend to be less tested.
Therefore, it’s easier to game.
The kneejerk solution I’d propose is “proof of novel work”. If you want funding to do X, you should show that you’ve done something to address X that others haven’t done. That could be a detailed insightful write-up (which indicates serious thinking / fact-finding); that could be some you did on the side, which isn’t necessarily conceptually novel but is useful work on X that others were not doing; etc.
I assume that this is an obvious / not new idea, so I’m curious where it doesn’t work. Also curious what else has been tried. (E.g. many organizations do “don’t apply, we only give to {our friends, people we find through our own searches, people who are already getting funding, …}”.)
A basic issue with a lot of deliberate philanthropy is the tension between:
In many domains, much of the biggest gains are likely to come from marginal opportunities. E.g. because they have more value of information, more large upsides, more addressing neglected areas (and therefore plausibly strategically important.
Marginal opportunities are harder to evaluate.
There’s less preexisting understanding, on the part of fund allocators.
The people applying would tend to be less tested.
Therefore, it’s easier to game.
The kneejerk solution I’d propose is “proof of novel work”. If you want funding to do X, you should show that you’ve done something to address X that others haven’t done. That could be a detailed insightful write-up (which indicates serious thinking / fact-finding); that could be some you did on the side, which isn’t necessarily conceptually novel but is useful work on X that others were not doing; etc.
I assume that this is an obvious / not new idea, so I’m curious where it doesn’t work. Also curious what else has been tried. (E.g. many organizations do “don’t apply, we only give to {our friends, people we find through our own searches, people who are already getting funding, …}”.)