Thanks Akhil! Can you point me to the study on CEDOVIP program and the research you are discussing. They seem to do as bunch of different things thanks!
Thanks yes I get it now! I think it might be important (if the charity even allows) to have a mechanism to share only to that program rather than just the charity “in general” itself—much like Givewell does with Malaria Consortium’s seasonal malaria prevention.
Otherwise a lot of money donated to that charity might go to less effective, unproven programs.
Absolutely agree. I’m unsure if donating to CEDOVIP via TLYCS helps you achieve this (vs donating directly to CEDOVIP) -- while their webpage only talks about the SASA! program, they don’t clarify if the donations are directed as such.
Thanks Akhil! Can you point me to the study on CEDOVIP program and the research you are discussing. They seem to do as bunch of different things thanks!
Hi Nick, since Akhil mentioned TLYCS you may be keen to check out https://www.thelifeyoucansave.org/best-charities/cedovip/ where they mention it “scaling the SASA! community mobilization program throughout Uganda efficiently and effectively”. Akhil previously mentioned this program in footnote #3 of his VAWG report https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/uH9akQzJkzpBD5Duw/what-you-can-do-to-help-stop-violence-against-women-and#fnshutzmwzwyj
Thanks yes I get it now! I think it might be important (if the charity even allows) to have a mechanism to share only to that program rather than just the charity “in general” itself—much like Givewell does with Malaria Consortium’s seasonal malaria prevention.
Otherwise a lot of money donated to that charity might go to less effective, unproven programs.
Absolutely agree. I’m unsure if donating to CEDOVIP via TLYCS helps you achieve this (vs donating directly to CEDOVIP) -- while their webpage only talks about the SASA! program, they don’t clarify if the donations are directed as such.