The most up to date versions of the list here can be found on the Effective Altruism Hub's links page, with a community-editable version cross-posted to the EA wiki.
Does anyone have thoughts or reports on non-English language effective altruism? Is it a promising area of outreach, and if so in what languages, and through what methods? In what countries and languages is it most active? (My impression is German, especially in Switzerland, and following that Dutch, Norwegian and Swedish. It's interesting that north European and historically protestant countries are particularly strong; I believe these have especially strong ethoses of private charity, in particular the UK - think the Victorian culture of charity.)
A few things worth noting:
- The book The Life You Can Save has been widely translated.
- Matt Wright and I got a basic version of the Giving What We Can site translated into several languages.
- Thanks to Pablo Stafforini, Spanish now has http://altruismoeficaz.net
- The list and map of EA groups shows the spread of these; some are much larger or more active than others (filtering to come if I, or someone else, get the time).
- Some have advocated 'spray and pay' EA marketing.
- There is a .impact project page for non-English outreach.
Here's a list of non-English language EA venues which I just compiled for the Effective Altruism Hub's links page, and cross-posted this to the EA wiki. It currently consists entirely of the general EA Facebook groups for linguistic communities, but additions are welcome.
- German EA group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1575844375976037/
- Italian EA group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/795131383874787/
- Hebrew EA group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/786744044734860/?ref=browser
- Bulgarian EA group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1375044486151027/?ref=browser
- Czech EA group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/329548610588797/?ref=browser
- Dutch: https://www.facebook.com/groups/262932060523750/?ref=browser
- French: https://www.facebook.com/groups/altruistes.efficaces/?ref=browser
- Russian: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1568058766787596/?ref=browser
- Indian languages: https://www.facebook.com/groups/415216661980478/
- Spanish: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1605543996325148/
If you know anyone potentially interested in EA who speaks these languages, do point or invite them to these groups. To invite someone to a group, join it and then use the box at the top right of it.
According to World Giving Index (p. 11) the English-speaking countries have a much stronger tradition of private charity than Northern European countries such as Germany or the Scandinavian countries.
My guess is that in countries with a high tax ratio and a comprehensive welfare state, there is less private charity - partly because the citizens simply have less post-tax earnings, and partly because they think there is less need for it since their governments are better at solving social problems. For instance, Norway and Sweden give away a higher share of Gross National Income in development aid than any other country (more than 1 %).
At the same time, my own country, Sweden, is the most rationalist country in the world, according to World Values Survey. Also, Sweden has a very generous refugee politics and receives by far the most asylum seekers in the OECD, which indicates a high level of altruism. This means that Effective Altruism should have a huge potential in Sweden.
A hypothesis I have is that one reason why Effective Altruism hasn't taken off in Sweden (besides the fact that EA generally is strongest in the English-speaking world) is the said comparatively weak tradition of charitable giving in Sweden. Therefore, I think it might be wise to emphasize other aspects of the EA movement when trying to sell it in Sweden. The same goes for other similar countries.
I recently wrote an introduction to the EA movement in Swedish on my blog and hope to be able to publish on the same topic in mainstream newspapers later on.
I'm skeptical of this as an explanation, for basically two reasons: