I am curious whether CEA and other individual organisations have their own de jure or de facto boards right now. I can’t find a specific board for CEA on CEA’s website except EVF’s board being listed. 80000 Hours claims to have its own president and trustees but I’m not sure whether that’s legally possible.
“Animal Charity Evaluators began in 2012 under the name Effective Animal Activism (EAA), as a division of the U.K.-based charity 80,000 Hours … In 2013, EAA underwent significant changes. Although our original focus was on creating discussion about tactics to help animals, this shifted towards an emphasis on creating quality educational and research content. EAA hired our first Executive Director Jon Bockman and merged with his charity, Justice for Animals, thereby officially becoming a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Our mission was revised to specify the goal of finding and promoting highly effective opportunities for helping animals, and we rebranded as Animal Charity Evaluators”
I am curious whether CEA and other individual organisations have their own de jure or de facto boards right now. I can’t find a specific board for CEA on CEA’s website except EVF’s board being listed. 80000 Hours claims to have its own president and trustees but I’m not sure whether that’s legally possible.
Each of the “children” of EVF are all legally part of EVF, and so share the same trustees.
CEA seems to have, or have had, an “advisory panel”: https://www.centreforeffectivealtruism.org/blog/advisory-panel-at-cea
A long time ago I was on an “advisory board” for 80k; not sure if they still have one: https://80000hours.org/2014/06/advisory-board-report-june-2014/
Not quite the same question but I believe ACE started as one of the CEA children but is a separate entity now.
“Animal Charity Evaluators began in 2012 under the name Effective Animal Activism (EAA), as a division of the U.K.-based charity 80,000 Hours … In 2013, EAA underwent significant changes. Although our original focus was on creating discussion about tactics to help animals, this shifted towards an emphasis on creating quality educational and research content. EAA hired our first Executive Director Jon Bockman and merged with his charity, Justice for Animals, thereby officially becoming a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Our mission was revised to specify the goal of finding and promoting highly effective opportunities for helping animals, and we rebranded as Animal Charity Evaluators”
https://animalcharityevaluators.org/about/background/our-history