Hi all!
I have just published an article on EA called 'Charity vs Revolution: Effective Altruism and the Systemic Change Objection'.
I re-state the systemic change objection in more charitable terms than one often sees and offer an epistemic critique of EA as well as somewhat more speculative critique of charity in general.
Some of you might find it interesting!
A pre-print is here: https://goo.gl/51AUDe
And the final, pay-walled version is here: https://link.springer.com/arti…/10.1007%2Fs10677-019-09979-5
Comments, critiques and complaints very welcome!
I think what we are looking for is work that is actually relevant/useful for effective altruism. This is just meta-commentary on what goes on within SMS.
Here's an accessible link: http://library1.org/_ads/7AD2E4176A3FF00C05EA7802BBD95A04
It's 300 pages long. Even restricting to the theory section, that's 60 pages, with the first article also being 60 pages long. Could be useful but still should be shorter for really meeting the "two paper rule". And the difference between a paper and a book is not just length, it's organization. It's much easier to skim a paper (abstract, conclusion, etc) than a book.
Looking at what he says in the theoretical section - the talk of rationality/irrationality seems directly related to what Hanson has written on signaling theory and what Scott Alexander has written about tribalism. They are covering the same ground, this is not a topic that EAs have been ignoring. Arguably Hanson/Alexander have a more up-to-date and accurate view.
Skimming other parts of this section, I'm not seeing anything with obvious implications for EA. There is a lot of common sense that should be apparent to anyone, and lots of classification and description, but I don't see much about actionable guidance for success. Though part of the problem is that it's about protest movements, which EA is not.
Not to mention - it's over half a century old, and it's about something that took place 130 years ago. A lot has changed since then: different norms, business practices, laws, policies, communication, media. Scholarship that doesn't take these things into account is fighting an uphill battle to be useful to current actors.