I think the Forum should have a collection of posts ("sequence") on global health and development. What posts should we include?
Here's a very rough preliminary list:
Moral foundations
Ord, Toby (2019) The moral imperative toward cost-effectiveness in global health, in Hilary Greaves & Theron Pummer (eds.) Effective Altruism: Philosophical Issues, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 29–36.
Ord, Toby (2012) Global poverty and the demands of morality, in John Perry (ed.) God, the Good, and Utilitarianism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 177–191.
Singer, Peter (1972) Famine, affluence, and morality, Philosophy & Public Affairs, vol. 1, pp. 229–243.
Giving
GiveWell (2010) Your donation can change someone’s life, GiveWell.
GiveWell (2016) The wrong donation can accomplish nothing, GiveWell.
GiveWell (2010) Your dollar goes further overseas, GiveWell, September.
Randomista debate
Halstead, John & Hauke Hillebrandt (2020) Growth and the case against randomista development, Effective Altruism Forum, January 16.
Ogden, Timothy (2020) RCTs in development economics, their critics and their evolution, in Florent Bédécarrats, Isabelle Guérin & François Roubaud (eds.) Randomized Control Trials in the Field of Development, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 126–151.
Aid skepticism
Karnofsky, Holden (2015) The lack of controversy over well-targeted aid, The GiveWell Blog, November 6.
MacAskill, William (2019) Aid scepticism and effective altruism, Journal of Practical Ethics, vol. 7, pp. 49–60.
Misc
Kuhn, Ben (2019) Why Nations Fail and the long-termist view of global poverty, Ben Kuhn’s Blog, July 16.
Kaufman, Jeff (2015) Why global poverty?, Jeff Kaufman’s Blog, August 11.
Ord, Toby (2017) The value of money going to different groups, Centre for Effective Altruism, May 2 (updated 19 February 2020).
As an alternative to "Famine, Affluence, and Morality," there is Peter Unger's Living High and Letting Die, of which Chapter 2 is particularly relevant. It's more philosophical (this could be a bad thing) and much more comprehensive than Singer's article.
Thanks. A related option would be to list The Singer solution to world poverty, which describes both Singer's drowning child example and some of Unger's thought experiments. (I thought that article was pretty powerful when I first read it, but that was over a decade ago.)