Upcoming Virtual Events
- 5th January - Charity Entrepreneurship Incubation Program: Information Event
- 5th January - Mathematicians and Physicists interested in Effective Altruism - Join the EA Maths and Physics Slack to find out more
- 8th January - C.S. Lewis and Effective Altruism by Mike Morell - Organised by EA for Christians
- 9th January - Giving What We Can Meetup
- 9th January - EA for Jews Virtual Social
- 9th January - Lightning Talks: Life Hacks - Organised by EA NYC
- 16th January - 8760 Hours: How to get the most out of next year - Organised by EA Philadelphia
- 19th January - Doing Good Better Reading Group
- 19th January - Panel Q&A: Working for Animals, and the State of Animal Law in the UK
- 20th January - Giving What We Can Open Forum
- 21st January - Jason Rudall: Altruism in International Law - Organised by Legal Priorities Project
- 22nd January - Pandemic Preparedness and Disease Control by Ana Karina Pitol - Organised by EA for Christians
- 28th January - Natalie Jones: Global Justice and Global Catastrophic Risk - Organised by Legal Priorities Project
- 31st January - 27th March - Alternative Protein Fundamentals Programme - 8 week programme run by the Cambridge University Alt. Protein Society, in collaboration with GFI, including technical and policy/entrepreneurship tracks. Applications close 13th January
- 7th February - 14th March - Intro Fellowship to Risks of Astronomical Suffering - Organised by the Center on Long-Term Risk. Applications close 12th January
- 7th February - 3rd April - EA Virtual Programs - Applications close 31st January
- Introductory EA Program
- In-Depth EA Program
- The Precipice Reading Group
Latest Research and Updates
Meta
- Carla Zoe Cremer and Luke Kemp with the post 'Democratising Risk - or how EA deals with critics'
- The schedule for EA global conferences in 2022 was announced
- WANBAM has been rebranded to Magnify Mentoring, looking to expand their mentorship programmes
- Giving What We Can with their updated Effective Giving Guide
- The EA Forum with a review of the first decade of posts
- Habiba Islam on why 80,000 Hours wants to talk to more people than ever
- A post introducing High-Impact Medicine
- The 2021 EA Funds Donor Lottery is open, and closes on the 10th of January
- A blog post looking at the crux between effective altruism and progress studies
- There is a new EA internships board
- Tessa on why we shouldn't aim for the minimum of self-care
- Ruth Grace on 'Doing more good vs. doing the most good possible'
- Lizka on 'Native languages in the EA community (and issues with assessing promisingness)'
- The winning entries from the creative writing contest on the EA Forum
- Anneke Pogarell and Jona Glade with a series of posts on why and how to run a workplace/professional EA group, including case studies of the UK civil service and London EA finance groups
- Sofia Balderson with three posts
- Akash with six takeaways from EA Global and EA retreats
- A post continuing on with a thread of EA Megaprojects
- Alex Holness-Tofts and Joan Gass with a post on EA movement building at top universities
- Richard Ngo asking 'What are some success stories of grant makers beating the wider EA community?
- A post announcing EffectiveCrypto, a donation platform targeting members of the crypto community
- Holden Karnofsky with five different ways that people think that they are improving the world and why this sometimes leads to conflict
- Emily Jennings with the goals of the EA Mental Health Navigator service for the next 6 months
- EA organisation updates for December 2021
Grants
- Open Phil have made 12 grants recently with a total value of $6,000,000
- $2,700,000 - Animal Welfare
- $2,600,000 - California YIMBY (Land Use Reform)
- $700,000 - Potential Risks from Advanced Artificial Intelligence
- The Survival and Flourishing Fund made 19 grants with a total value of $9,600,000
- EA Infrastructure Fund: May–August 2021 grant recommendations, they have made 42 grants with a total value of $1,700,000
Global Development
- The EU has launched a 300 billion euro global development investment plan
- Max Roser investigating global economic inequality
- GiveDirectly on why GiveWell should donate sooner rather than later
- Dylan Matthews looking into the mortality costs of pollution, with estimates that it kills 3,400,000 million people a year
- Kelsey Piper on how faltering global vaccination effort paved the way for new variants
- British International Investment have announced their 5 year strategy, aiming to invest up to £2 billion a year in development projects
- Vox looking at whether charities should spend your money now - or save it to help people later
- A 5-year global study has been started to study human flourishing, with 240,000 individuals in 22 countries
- Matt Yglesias interviewing Elie Hassenfeld about GiveWell
- David Wallace-Wells with an article on how pollution can kill 10 million people a year
- A post on how AI could be used to accurately predict tsunamis
- The Life You Can Save are starting their own in-house charity evaluation
- An article asking 'Does effective altruism drive private cross-border aid? A qualitative study of American donors to grassroots INGOs'
- Bastian Herre looking at how democratic rights have changed over the last 200 years
- The Wellcome Leap Health Breakthrough Network now supports a network of over 650,000 scientists and engineers, aiming to accelerate breakthroughs in human health
- Open Philanthropy with their incoming program officers for South Asian Air Quality and Global Aid Advocacy
- A new paper looking at biometric data and it's connecting to subjective wellbeing
Animal Welfare
- Marc Gunther on why the future of animal welfare lies beyond the US and Europe
- Future Meat Technologies raises $347 million in funding, the largest investment ever made in the cultivated meat industry
- Cellular Agriculture Europe has recently launched to represent the cell ag industry in Europe
- The Good Food Institute Europe with their favourite moments from 2021
- A post introducing the Shrimp Welfare Project
- Lewis Bollard with 'Ten big wins for farm animals in 2021'
- A post looking at the world's first octopus farm
- Mosa Meat with an assessment of cultivated meat progress, including response to a recent sceptical article in The Counter
- Haven King-Nobles with a 2.5 year retrospective on Fish Welfare Initiative
- The BBC looking into insect suffering
Existential & Catastrophic Risks
- NASA has started it's first trial of the 'kinetic impact' technique as a planetary defence strategy against asteroids
- 80,000 Hours Podcast with Jaime Yassif on safeguarding bioscience to prevent catastrophic lab accidents and bioweapons development
- An Ask Me Anything with Seth Baum, executive director of the Global Catastrophic Risk Institute
- Paul Ingram with the report 'The Stepping Stones Approach to Nuclear disarmament diplomacy'
- An updated Global Health Security index, measuring the capacities of 195 countries to prepare for epidemics and pandemics
- An Ask Me Anything with Joan Rohlfing, President and COO of the Nuclear Threat Initiative
Improving Institutions
- Kelsey Piper on 'How bad research clouded our understanding of Covid-19'
- Robert Downey Jr. introducing a new way to crowdfund science projects
- The Research on Research Institute with a report on their randomisation of funding project
- C Tilli with a post on 'Improving science: Influencing the direction of research and the choice of research questions'
- Vox looking at a new biomedical research institute, called the Arc Institute, an experiment in how science is conducted and funded
- Ozzie Gooen asking why there is a lack of 'red teaming' in a lot of ambitious projects
- Misha Yagudin, Nuño Sempere and Eli Lifland on 'Prediction Markets in The Corporate Setting'
Environment
- Luisa Sandkuehler, Violet Buxton-Walsh and Johannes Ackva with a report on 'Navigating the changing landscape of climate philanthropy'
- Giving Green with donation recommendations for combatting climate change in Australia
- Azeem Azhar podcast with Nick hawker, discussing nuclear fusion
- PWC report on the state of climate tech, with the proportion of venture capital dollars going into climate tech rising from around 6% to ~14%
- Hannah Ritchie looking into 'How much energy do countries consume when we take offshoring into account?'
Longtermism
- Avital Balwit responding to recent criticisms of longtermism
- Richard Fisher on why 'long rituals' matter
- A post on the law and longtermism network, set up by the Legal Priorities Project
- A post on 'Convergence thesis between longtermism and neartermism'
- The Global Priorities Fellowship and the Early Career Conference Programme are both open for applications. Deadline is 14th January
Emerging Technology
- The Future of Life Institute with an introduction to autonomous weapons and why they matter
- Ozzie Gooen with a post outlining 13 different stances on AGI
- Ross Gruetzemacher and Jess Whittlestone wrote a paper in Futures exploring the transformative potential of AI
- Larks with a 2021 AI alignment literature review and charity comparison
- Will Bradshaw with a post suggesting that biosecurity needs engineers and materials scientists
- Between June and August this year, Principles of Intelligent Behavior in Biological and Social Systems are running a summer research fellowship, application deadline is January 1 6th
- A new paper on 'Filling gaps in trustworthy development of AI'
- Azeem Azhar discussing with Murray Shanahan where AI has exceeded and where it has fallen short of expectations
- Neel Nanda with an overview of the AI alignment landscape
- Stuart Russell was chosen to give the Reith Lectures for the BBC, looking at how AI could change the world
Other Links
- Holden Karnofsky on the 'Bayesian Mindset'
- Spencer Greenberg on 'Anchor Beliefs'
- James Ozden with 'A case for the effectiveness of protest'
- Stephen Clare with giving recommendations for people interested in preventing great power conflicts
- A post with thoughts on 'Technocracy vs populism'
- A report on how there may be less polarisation on issues than people think
- Stijn with 'The case against degrowth'
- 80,000 Hours interviewing U.S. presidential candidate Andrew Yang
- Sam Harris interviewing Sam Bankman-Fried about EA
- John Buridan with a post on how high school seniors react to advice from 80,000 Hours
- Zvi Mowshowitz with thoughts on the Survival and Flourishing fund
- John G. Halstead looking into whether we are going to run out of phosphorous
- A psychology paper looking at intuitions around population ethics
- An interview with Sophie Rose, co-founder of 1Day Sooner
- An interview with Alexander Berger on philanthropic opportunities
- Giving What We Can featured on the BBC
- A paper looking at 'How effective altruism can help psychologists maximize their impact'
- Marcus Daniell named 2021 Arthur Ashe humanitarian of the year
- Lynette Bye with the post 'Want to be an expert? Build deep models'
Good News
- 99 good news stories from 2021 by Future Crunch, including one of the four major flu viruses going extinct, a malaria vaccine, decline in HIV infections, decline in smoking and India doubling it's public healthcare spending
- Spain passes a new law recognising animals as sentient beings