Was wondering if anyone could point me to where the EA / CHAI connection came from and why they seem so highly rated. GiveWell just gave them a grant, with part of the explanation "we view CHAI as a highly-aligned partner."
I ask this because I've had a few very minor interactions with CHAI offices and haven't been particularly impressed (with not much to go on) I would have generalised them loosely in the category of a inefficient "BINGO" (Big International NGO) more along the lines of OxFam or World Vision, with big in-country offices in capital cities with highly paid staff, running a range of temporary projects often through "implementation partners" tackling a range of causes they don't have years of experience and expertise in. My default from experience would be to assume this kind of org to be inefficient and not particularly good at what they do (Jack of all trades, master of none)
From their website, you can see the wide range of what they do - basically everything health related...
They don't seem to fir the classic efficient, deeply knowledgable management light One-Effective-Cause EA funded org like AMF or the Humane league. Or basically any CE charity for that matter.
To ask more specific questions
1) What's the story behind the EA / CHAI connection? How did it come about?
2) What makes them "Highly aligned" with EA in particular as GiveWell states
3) What separates them from other big NGOs that do similar kind of stuff?
I'm not asking this in bad faith, I really don't know much about CHAI. I'm genuinely keen to understand why GiveWell and others consider CHAI a good place to spend money.
When you only use the acronym "CHAI" I assumed you were talking about the "Center for Human Compatible Artificial Intelligence" ( https://humancompatible.ai/ ) since this has strong and obvious links to Effective Altruism. Then I followed the link and saw you meant the "Clinton Health Access Initiative". You should clarify to stop other people having the same misunderstanding.
Thanks fixed!