We are delighted to announce the 2023 Effective Altruism Africa Residency Fellowship, to be hosted on the island of Zanzibar. The Program shall host up to 20  fellows for a 10 week program beginning January 15, 2023 through to March 31, 2023.

The objective of the residency is to provide structured support and develop community connections between Effective Altruists working on projects improving wellbeing across the African continent. We especially encourage Effective Altruists with personal roots in Africa to apply. 

Fellows will be provided with free modern accommodation and working space with high-speed fibre internet. The residency will be located in the same community as the growing Silicon Zanzibar collective of tech companies, which will facilitate collaboration with existing organizations who have scaled up operations across the African continent.

We shall receive applications up to the 13th November 2022. Applicants shall receive a response to their applications on or before 20th November 2022.

If you are interested in applying, please complete the application form here. For additional questions, submit your queries here below.

Comments31


Sorted by Click to highlight new comments since:
DMMF
26
5
0

You write: "We are delighted to announce the 2023 Effective Altruism Africa Residency Fellowship, to be hosted on the island of Zanzibar."

 

Who is we? I even clicked on the application form and still don't know.

Hi DMMF,

I apologize for the error. The program is an initiative by the EA Nairobi Group led and organized by Daniel Yu.

Best,

Anne N N

So it is being organised by the Center for Effective Altruism? Or is being organised by a separate organisation, with help/sponsorship from CEA?

Hi Neel,

*EDITED*


 

The Residency program is guaranteed funding by Daniel Yu, founder and CEO of Wasoko, while awaiting potential funding from other sources.

What is the EA Charter? I haven't heard of it before. Is there a link to a description of it?

And I think Neel was asking who is organizing the program's day to day operations, not just who is funding it.

Hi Thomas,

*EDITED*

Apologies for the previous error. The program will be organized by members drawn from the EA Nairobi chapter, including myself while being supported by Daniel Yu. 

Kind Regards,

Anne N N


 

*EDITED*


 

The program is supported by members of the EA Nairobi Chapter alongside other EAs in Africa in consultation with CEA.


 

Awesome - excited about this! Please let me know if you want me or someone from Wave to give a talk or say hello. (I am not likely to make it in person, but it's not crazy that someone from my team might be.)

Hi there Lincoln,

Thank you for your gracious offer. We would be honored to have Waves' presence in the program. Please send me an email on annenganga554@gmail.com so we can work everything out. 

I look forward to speaking with you.

Cheers,

Anne N N

No feedback yet past the day we expected feedback? Is this genuine?

Hi Anne Nganga! Habari!

This looks particularly interesting to me as I’m originally from Zanzibar.

I think I should point out that the last question has got no space for an answer. I hope the form will be fixed soon enough that people will get to submit their applications!

Looking forward to see the great outcome out of this!

Thank you! Asante!

Hi Abdul,

Great to hear from you. We're very excited to host the program in Zanzibar.

Thank you for the observation. The form has been fixed.

Best,

Anne N N

This looks exciting!

The application form link doesn't currently work. 

Hi Tristan, thanks for noting that. We're working to add a working link. It should be up in no time.

Hi Anne! Do you know of any efforts similar to this going on in the summer? I lead the EA group at Georgetown University and would not be able to apply for this spring, however I would be very interested to know if there are summer opportunities? 

Hi Kearney,

Thank you for your interest in the program. The Penn Development Research Initiative will be running a fellowship program for junior African social scientists with interests in impact evaluation, evidence-based policy etc. to spend a semester at Penn. This will be in September-December 2023.

If this piques your interest, please have a closer look here. I am happy to get in touch and discuss this further.

Best,

Anne  N N

Hi Anne,

 

Habari? Thank you very much for the link, I honestly came to know of this opportunity from your reply to Kearney.  Is there a particular site or forum in which such opportunities are posted?

 

Thanks

Hi there Kassa,

You can always find such opportunities in the events and fellowships section on the forum!

Best, Anne N N

What happens after the program? Are the fellows supported to launch a startup? Are fellows ideas funded? Kindly detail what the structured support is.

Kindly help with response to the above questions.

Hi Chidi,

The objective of the residency is to provide structured support and develop community connections between Effective Altruists working on projects improving wellbeing across the African continent.

We endeavor to foster an environment of reflection and collaboration amongst EA aligned professionals within which thoughts, ideas and interventions in Effective Altruism are encouraged,  discussed, critiqued and supported accordingly. 

Indeed, fellows will have the opportunity to create aligned connections and forge valuable, long lasting networks. The support we seek to offer fellows include accommodation, a co-working space, language support through Swahili classes, amongst others. 

You may reach me on my email at annenganga554@gmail.com to attend to any concern arising.

Best,

Anne N N

Thank you so much for the response

What kind of support will be provided? E.g., meals, support for patterns to come,  leasure activities 

Hi Ren,

We endeavor to provide fellows all round support during the subsistence of the program. This will include accommodation,  a co-working space with high speed fibre internet access, Swahili classes, entertainment, team building activities and a living stipend.

You can reach me on my email at annenganga554@gmail.com incase of queries or concerns.

Best,

Anne N N

Oh dear, I am late to the party. Hopefully will be able to apply for the next round. Will there be a next round?

Is it possible for visit for a shorter time than 12 weeks?

Hi Lauren,

Successful applicants who make requests to be indulged on time may be considered.

I hope this answers your question.

Best,

Anne Nganga

Meanwhile, this is a great initiative

Are the flights covered to get to East Africa?

Hi Yelnats T.J, the program endeavors to offer travel support to successful applicants who need it.

So cool! I'll really be waiting to see what comes out of this!

Hi Guy,

Thank you for your message. We're excited to make this program a success!

Regards,

Anne N N

Curated and popular this week
Paul Present
 ·  · 28m read
 · 
Note: I am not a malaria expert. This is my best-faith attempt at answering a question that was bothering me, but this field is a large and complex field, and I’ve almost certainly misunderstood something somewhere along the way. Summary While the world made incredible progress in reducing malaria cases from 2000 to 2015, the past 10 years have seen malaria cases stop declining and start rising. I investigated potential reasons behind this increase through reading the existing literature and looking at publicly available data, and I identified three key factors explaining the rise: 1. Population Growth: Africa's population has increased by approximately 75% since 2000. This alone explains most of the increase in absolute case numbers, while cases per capita have remained relatively flat since 2015. 2. Stagnant Funding: After rapid growth starting in 2000, funding for malaria prevention plateaued around 2010. 3. Insecticide Resistance: Mosquitoes have become increasingly resistant to the insecticides used in bednets over the past 20 years. This has made older models of bednets less effective, although they still have some effect. Newer models of bednets developed in response to insecticide resistance are more effective but still not widely deployed.  I very crudely estimate that without any of these factors, there would be 55% fewer malaria cases in the world than what we see today. I think all three of these factors are roughly equally important in explaining the difference.  Alternative explanations like removal of PFAS, climate change, or invasive mosquito species don't appear to be major contributors.  Overall this investigation made me more convinced that bednets are an effective global health intervention.  Introduction In 2015, malaria rates were down, and EAs were celebrating. Giving What We Can posted this incredible gif showing the decrease in malaria cases across Africa since 2000: Giving What We Can said that > The reduction in malaria has be
Ronen Bar
 ·  · 10m read
 · 
"Part one of our challenge is to solve the technical alignment problem, and that’s what everybody focuses on, but part two is: to whose values do you align the system once you’re capable of doing that, and that may turn out to be an even harder problem", Sam Altman, OpenAI CEO (Link).  In this post, I argue that: 1. "To whose values do you align the system" is a critically neglected space I termed “Moral Alignment.” Only a few organizations work for non-humans in this field, with a total budget of 4-5 million USD (not accounting for academic work). The scale of this space couldn’t be any bigger - the intersection between the most revolutionary technology ever and all sentient beings. While tractability remains uncertain, there is some promising positive evidence (See “The Tractability Open Question” section). 2. Given the first point, our movement must attract more resources, talent, and funding to address it. The goal is to value align AI with caring about all sentient beings: humans, animals, and potential future digital minds. In other words, I argue we should invest much more in promoting a sentient-centric AI. The problem What is Moral Alignment? AI alignment focuses on ensuring AI systems act according to human intentions, emphasizing controllability and corrigibility (adaptability to changing human preferences). However, traditional alignment often ignores the ethical implications for all sentient beings. Moral Alignment, as part of the broader AI alignment and AI safety spaces, is a field focused on the values we aim to instill in AI. I argue that our goal should be to ensure AI is a positive force for all sentient beings. Currently, as far as I know, no overarching organization, terms, or community unifies Moral Alignment (MA) as a field with a clear umbrella identity. While specific groups focus individually on animals, humans, or digital minds, such as AI for Animals, which does excellent community-building work around AI and animal welfare while
Max Taylor
 ·  · 9m read
 · 
Many thanks to Constance Li, Rachel Mason, Ronen Bar, Sam Tucker-Davis, and Yip Fai Tse for providing valuable feedback. This post does not necessarily reflect the views of my employer. Artificial General Intelligence (basically, ‘AI that is as good as, or better than, humans at most intellectual tasks’) seems increasingly likely to be developed in the next 5-10 years. As others have written, this has major implications for EA priorities, including animal advocacy, but it’s hard to know how this should shape our strategy. This post sets out a few starting points and I’m really interested in hearing others’ ideas, even if they’re very uncertain and half-baked. Is AGI coming in the next 5-10 years? This is very well covered elsewhere but basically it looks increasingly likely, e.g.: * The Metaculus and Manifold forecasting platforms predict we’ll see AGI in 2030 and 2031, respectively. * The heads of Anthropic and OpenAI think we’ll see it by 2027 and 2035, respectively. * A 2024 survey of AI researchers put a 50% chance of AGI by 2047, but this is 13 years earlier than predicted in the 2023 version of the survey. * These predictions seem feasible given the explosive rate of change we’ve been seeing in computing power available to models, algorithmic efficiencies, and actual model performance (e.g., look at how far Large Language Models and AI image generators have come just in the last three years). * Based on this, organisations (both new ones, like Forethought, and existing ones, like 80,000 Hours) are taking the prospect of near-term AGI increasingly seriously. What could AGI mean for animals? AGI’s implications for animals depend heavily on who controls the AGI models. For example: * AGI might be controlled by a handful of AI companies and/or governments, either in alliance or in competition. * For example, maybe two government-owned companies separately develop AGI then restrict others from developing it. * These actors’ use of AGI might be dr