Work with me researching longtermist topics at Rethink Priorities!
- Researcher (Longtermism)
- Senior Research Manager (Longtermism)
- Researcher (AI Governance and Strategy)
- Fellow (AI Governance and Strategy)
Applications for all roles close on Sunday, October 24.
We're relatively new to the longtermist space, but I think we have:
- delivered some useful results already
- good norms and research culture
- a direct line to decision-makers.
Here are what I think are Rethink Priorities’ most salient pros and cons for researchers, relative to plausible counterfactuals:
Pros
- fully remote work (it was already remote before 2020)
- impactful decision-relevant research
- very interesting questions
- meaningful work
- above average work-life balance
- decent pay
- excellent benefits
- good mentorship
- great coworkers
- minimal bureaucracy
Cons
- fully remote work (I miss chatting with coworkers irl)
- less research flexibility than academia, FHI, or most independent research/blogging
- relatedly, research paradigms less well-suited to discovering drastic new revolutionary change
- low interest in publishing papers/academia
- no senior longtermist researchers
If you want to work with me, Michael Aird, Peter Wildeford, and others to help hack away at some of humanity's greatest problems, please consider applying to Rethink Priorities!
If you are interested in applying, please feel free to ask questions here! I will try my best to respond to most questions publicly on this forum so the system is reasonably fair and everybody can learn from the shared questions! I’ve also attached an FAQ here.
EDIT 2021/10/09: See other comments about working on the LT team from my coworker Michael and our former Visiting Fellow Lizka.
Speaking just about the publishing point, when I was trying to leverage my old network to help recruit for our past global health & development hiring rounds, it was definitely the case that developmental economists (who have a robust pre-existing non-EA academic field) viewed not being as incentivized in the org to publish academic papers as a noticeable negative.
It's possible this is not as relevant for the longtermist roles, as a) I expect our candidate pool to on average be more EA and b) the academic fields for longtermist topics, outside of a few narrow subniches in existing disciplines, are noticeably less robust.
One plus I forgot to mention for academic applicants is that in addition to the minimal bureaucracy, we (obviously) have no mandatory teaching load. Researchers who want to "teach" can have interns or do mentorship calls with junior applicants.
I see that you and MichaelA both see low academic incentives or inclinations as a plus, rather than a cost to be paid. For me personally, this is all a moot point as I'm reasonably confident (especially now) that I can perform at the level of e.g. PhDs at top universities at doing RP-style work, whereas I think I will not be able to perform at that level in academia.