I'm interested in suggestions of jobs, career paths or projects that might help promote open borders or (more moderately) just help more people to be able to migrate, or help migrants and refugees.
For example, are there any job boards or newsletters that focus on this? Has anyone done cost-effectiveness analyses of particular organizations working in this area, or particular approaches?
I care a lot about this issue personally, and roles in this area could be highly impactful (e.g. 80k has immigration restrictions as a 'sometimes recommended' problem), but I haven't seen much EA discussion or advice around this.
I'm interested in suggestions even if they don't seem that highly-impactful in the grand scheme of things. (e.g., 'being an English tutor for refugees' is a job in this category, even though it's probably not highly impactful by EA metrics).
For sure! Let me know if you want to chat.
On "why high skill immigration", I wrote another blog post on my decision to focus on it:
"I have a strong belief in the importance of immigrants to the US, both as a matter of fact (economically/ culturally/ scientifically) and as a matter of what the US should aspire to be.
Living in Kenya makes this especially salient - it was so easy for me to move here and I think I am doing good. There are so many people here who can’t move to the US, and I think that they would do good.
I think allowing immigration of skilled workers is pretty indisputably good for the US, those individuals, and (more disputably) for the world. This article captures arguments for high-skill immigration quite well.
...
I personally would be much more in favor of lots more immigration of all kinds - low-skill and refugee as well. But I’m focusing on high-skill immigration since those are politically much tougher issues, high-skill immigration is more important from a scientific / economic progress perspective, and the fact that it seems likely that increased high-skill immigration makes countries more receptive to immigration of all kinds.
A further clarification that I’m saying “immigration” here for simplicity, but I am including temporary residence status that enables people to work (e.g., H1B visas) in the scope of what I am working on."