"American UBI: for and against"
"A brief history of Rosicrucianism & the Invisible College"
"Were almost all the signers of the Declaration of Independence high-degree Freemasons?"
"Have malaria case rates gone down in areas where AMF did big bednet distributions?"
"What is the relationship between economic development and mental health? Is there a margin at which further development decreases mental health?"
"Literature review: Dunbar's number"
"Why is Rwanda outperforming other African nations?"
"The longtermist case for animal welfare"
"Philosopher-Kings: why wise governance is important for the longterm future"
"Case studies: when has democracy outperform technocracy? (and vice versa)"
"Examining the tradeoff between coordination and coercion"
"Spiritual practice as an EA cause area"
"Tools for thought as an EA cause area"
"Is strong, ubiquitous encryption a net positive?"
"How important are coral reefs to ocean health? How can they be protected?"
"What role does the Amazon rainforest play in regulating the North American biosphere?"
"What can the US do to protect the Amazon from Bolsonaro?"
"Can the Singaporean governance model scale?"
"Is EA complacent?"
"Flow-through effects of widespread addiction"
A post re-examining the suffering impact of veganism in countries with good average livestock welfare in many product categories. New Zealand, for instance, has grass-fed cows as a norm, egg hens are usually required to have decent amounts of space and won't appear to be especially stressed, and the main supermarket chain Countdown just switched to providing mostly "free farmed" pork (birthing sows seem entirely free, but pigs destined for market are moved to barns that are only limitedly free) (excludes non store brand of pork-based products, but the store brand bacon looks pretty good quality so it might be popular enough).
I get the impression that we're unlikely to receive this kind of analysis through most channels promoting animal welfare. They might not want to tell you about the good parts. I tend to encounter a lot of copenhagen ethics and consent arguments (which can't be addressed by improving conditions no matter how much you improve them, which is a bit of a reduction to absurdity of consent arguments).
It may help to draw attention to good policies, focus attention on the worst offenders, and occasionally improve EA nutrition? Promoting animal welfare within the industry is likely to accelerate incremental change from within. Stockpeople who are doing especially well in limiting animal suffering will tend to be proud of their way of doing things and to want to promote it to legislators for both moral and economic reasons.
Having resources like this may also help for being able to come across as balanced and informed when discussing local animal welfare.
Regarding "change from within", I have since found confirmation from the excellent growth economist Mushtaq Kahn https://80000hours.org/podcast/episodes/mushtaq-khan-institutional-economics/ people within an industry are generally the best at policing others in the industry, they have the most energy for it, they know how to measure adherence, and they often have inside access. Without them, policing corruption often fails to happen.