I’ll be interviewing Emma Slawinski for an audio AMA on the 1st of February. Ask your questions here, and we will cover them in the interview! The interview will be published as a podcast and transcript.
Update: Emma Slawinski saw how detailed the questions were and wanted to respond in text instead! Expect her answers here soon.
“Factory-farmed chickens live absolutely horrible lives; their suffering is the single biggest animal welfare issue facing the country at present [my emphasis]” ~ Emma Slawinski
Emma Slawinski is the Director of Policy, Prevention and Campaigns for the RSPCA (the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals- the largest animal welfare focused charity in the UK). She has over a decade of experience in animal welfare campaigning. Previously, she worked for organisations such as Compassion in World Farming, where she worked on the End The Cage Age campaign, and World Animal Protection.
At the RSPCA, she has:
- Worked on the #CutTheChase campaign to end greyhound racing in the UK, and the Kept Animals Bill Campaign.
- Made speeches in front of parliament in favour of banning live export of livestock.
- Spoken against no-stun slaughter on GB news.
- Been quoted in BBC articles on issues such as horse racing reform and badger culling.
- Promoted the annual Animal Kindness Index, which shows how discordant the British public’s views on animal welfare are.
What is the RSPCA?
The RSPCA is a charity with a long history. It was the first charity in the world to be primarily focused on preventing animal suffering. In 2021, it received £151 million in funding, making it one of the largest charities in the UK.
The RSPCA’s campaigns cover everything from banning disposable vapes and changing firework laws, to ending cages for farm animals.
I was especially interested in doing an AMA with someone from the RSPCA because of this article, which focused on the plight of chickens in the UK. In Emma’s words:
“We slaughter about a billion chickens in the UK every year – an extraordinary number. It is very difficult to envisage the scale of that.
“Yet we never see these creatures, despite their vast numbers, because they are locked into incredibly cramped spaces. They are also genetically selected to grow incredibly quickly. We get through them at an extraordinary rate because they are bred to produce the maximum amount of meat in the fastest possible time.
“Factory-farmed chickens live absolutely horrible lives; their suffering is the single biggest animal welfare issue facing the country at present [my emphasis]”
Here are some themes that I will be focusing on in my questions:
- The RSPCA’s most effective campaigns, and how they measure the impact they have through public messaging.
- How the RSPCA prioritises amongst its various causes.
- What challenges it faces because of its size.
- Whether it has ways to influence policy that smaller and newer charities do not.
You can use these as a jumping off point, but don't feel constrained by them. Ask anything!
I’m also v interested in the bully ban campaign issue.
Some prominent EAs criticised the campaign because they thought that the lives saved (around 5 lives per year at current rates plus many more maulings, and more still if we expect that the bully population would have continued to grow as it was doing prior to the ban), while valuable, would not exceed the cost of effort involved. But the RSPCA actively campaigned against this life-saving policy and continues to argue for its reversal. Why?
nb I actually think the EA bully ban critics might have been "right for the wrong reasons". While they vastly overestimated the effort involved in the campaign and therefore imagined more resources were spent per life than was actually the case (in fact the campaign had no external funding, just a few months part time work from Lawrence Newport which would make the anti-bully campaign about as effective as a GiveWell top charity in expenditure per life saved), it turns out that Dr Newport is a generational campaigning talent and if you value his time that way then a few months of effort actually does represent a significant commitment. Though if you count talent discovery as a campaign outcome it tips the balance the other way again!
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