Hi all,
We're the staff at Rethink Priorities and we would like you to Ask Us Anything! We'll be answering all questions starting Friday, November 19.
About the Org
Rethink Priorities is an EA research organization focused on helping improve decisions among funders and key decision-makers within EA and EA-aligned organizations. You might know of our work on quantifying the number of farmed vertebrates and invertebrates, interspecies comparisons of moral weight, ballot initiatives as a tool for EAs, the risk of nuclear winter, or running the EA Survey, among other projects. You can see all of our work to date here.
Over the next few years, we’re expanding our farmed animal welfare and moral weight research programs, launching an AI governance and strategy research program, and continuing to grow our new global health and development wing (including evaluating climate change interventions).
Team
You can find bios of our team members here. Links on names below go to RP publications by the author (if any are publicly available at this point).
Leadership
- Marcus Davis — Co-CEO — Focus on animal welfare and operations
- Peter Wildeford — Co-CEO — Focus on longtermism, global health and development, surveys, and EA movement research
Animal Welfare
- Dr. Kim Cuddington — Senior Ecologist — Wild animal welfare
- Dr. William McAuliffe — Senior Research Manager — Wild animal welfare, farmed animal welfare
- Jacob Peacock — Senior Research Manager — Farmed animal welfare
- Dr. Jason Schukraft — Senior Research Manager — Moral weight, global health and development
- Daniela Waldhorn — Senior Research Manager — Invertebrate welfare, farmed animal welfare
- Dr. Neil Dullaghan — Senior Researcher — Farmed animal welfare
- Dr. Samara Mendez — Senior Researcher — Farmed animal welfare
- Saulius Šimčikas — Senior Researcher — Farmed animal welfare
- Meghan Barrett — Entomology Specialist — Invertebrate welfare
- Dr. Holly Elmore — Researcher — Wild animal welfare
- Michael St. Jules — Associate Researcher — Farmed animal welfare
Longtermism
- Michael Aird — Researcher — Nuclear war, AI governance and strategy
- Linch Zhang — Researcher — Forecasting, AI governance and strategy
Surveys and EA movement research
- David Moss — Principal Research Director — Surveys and EA movement research
- Dr. David Reinstein — Senior Economist — EA Survey, effective giving research
- Dr. Jamie Elsey — Senior Behavioral Scientist — Surveys
- Dr. Willem Sleegers — Senior Behavioral Scientist — Surveys
Global Health and Development
- Dr. Greer Gosnell — Senior Environmental Economist — Climate change, global health interventions
- Ruby Dickson — Researcher — Global health interventions
- Jenny Kudymowa — Researcher — Global health interventions
- Bruce Tsai — Researcher — Climate change, global health interventions
Operations
- Abraham Rowe — COO — Operations, finance, HR, development, communications
- Janique Behman — Director of Development — Development, communications
- Dr. Dominika Krupocin — Senior People and Culture Coordinator — HR
- Carolina Salazar — Project and Hiring Manager — HR, project management
- Romina Giel — Operations Associate — Operations, finance
Ask Us Anything
Please ask us anything — about the org and how we operate, about the staff, about our research… anything!
You can read more about us in our 2021 Impact and 2022 Strategy update or visit our website: rethinkpriorities.org.
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Also, we’re currently raising funds to continue growing in 2022. We consider ourselves funding constrained — we continue to get far more qualified applicants to our roles than we are able to hire, and have scalable infrastructure to support far more research. We accept and track restricted funds by cause area if that is of interest.
If you'd like to support our work, visit https://www.rethinkpriorities.org/donate, give on Giving Tuesday via Facebook to potentially secure matching funds, or email Janique Behman at janique@rethinkpriorities.org.
We'll be answering all questions starting Friday, November 19.
[This is not at all an organizational view; just some thoughts from me]
tl;dr: I think mostly RP is able to grow in multiple areas at once without there being strong tradeoffs between them (for reasons including that RP is good at scaling & that the pools of funding and talent for each cause area are somewhat different). And I'm glad it's done so, since I'd guess that may have contributed to RP starting and scaling up the longtermism department (even though naively I'd now prefer RP be more longtermist).
I think RP is unusually good at scaling, at being a modular collection of somewhat disconnected departments focusing on quite different things and each growing and doing great stuff, and at meeting the specific needs of actors making big decisions (especially EA funders; note that RP also does well at other kinds of work, but this type of work is where RP seems most unusual in EA).
Given that, it could well make sense for RP to be somewhat agnostic between the major EA causes, since it can meet major needs in each, and adding each department doesn't very strongly trade off against expanding other departments.
(I'd guess there's at least some tradeoff, but it's possible there's none or that it's on-net complementary; e.g. there are some cases where people liking our work in one area helped us get funding or hires for another area, and having lots of staff with many areas of expertise in the same org can be useful for getting feedback etc. One thing to bear in mind here is that, as noted elsewhere in this AMA, there's a lot of funding and "junior talent" theoretically available in EA and RP seems unusually good at combining these things to produce solid outputs.)
I would personally like RP to focus much more exclusively on longtermism. And sometimes I feel a vague pull to advocate for that. But RP's more cause-neutral, partly demand-driven approach has worked out very well from my perspective so far, in that it may have contributed to RP moving into longtermism and then scaling up that team substantially.[1] (I mean that from my perspective this is very good for the world, not just that it let me get a cool job.) So I think I should endorse that overall decision procedure.
This feels kind-of related to moral trade and maybe kind-of to the veil of ignorance.
That's not to say that I think we shouldn't think at all about what areas are really most important in general, what's most important on the current margin within EA, where our comparative advantage is, etc. I know we think at least somewhat about those things (though I'm mostly involved in decisions about the longtermism department rather than broader org strategy so I don't bother trying to learn the details). But I think maybe the tradeoffs between growing each area are smaller than one might guess from the outside, such that that sort of high-level internal cause area priority-setting is somewhat less important than one might've guessed.
This doesn't really directly answer your question, since I think Peter and Marcus are better placed to do so and since I've already written a lot on this semi-tangent...
[1] My understanding (I only joined in late 2020) is that for a brief period at its very beginning, RP had no longtermist work (I think it was just global health & dev and animals?). Later, it had longtermism as just a small fraction of its work (1 researcher). RP only made multiple hires in this area in late 2020, after already having had substantial successes in other areas. At that point, it would've been unsurprising if people at the org thought they should just go all-in on their existing areas rather than branching out into longtermism. But they instead kept adding additional areas, including longtermism. And now the longtermism team is likely to expand quite substantially, which again could've been not done if the org was focusing more exclusively on its initial main focus areas.