An occasional criticism of EA is that the structure of the community is lacking in democracy, that the main organizations of EA are centralized entities that tend to operate somewhat like a non-profit corporation and its subsidiaries.
One way to change this would be to start to operate more like an association, with a membership who can elect leaders to positions within EA orgs. Many charitable organizations, such as service clubs like Rotary Club and Lions Club, operate in this manner.
Given the already existing structure of EA, I'm not sure how exactly this would look like for us. Perhaps a parallel "Society of Effective Altruists" could exist alongside CEA. Or Perhaps CEA could itself restructure to have certain positions on either the executive or the board reserved for elections, to give a sense of representation to the wider EA community.
How the membership would work is also debatable. For instance, would voting members be required to pay a membership fee? Or maybe people with enough EA Forum karma and/or who work or volunteer at any EA affiliated organization could count?
These are questions, but they seem to be questions that have never really been asked. Some past discussions have mentioned "we should have more democracy in EA" but rarely offer concrete proposals for how that would work, so in the interest of furthering the debate, I've made this poll.
50% disagree➔ 0% agreeI can see two realistic models for the parallel organization, which I'm not a fan of:
1) A competitor to CEA. Just like CEA, this org would mainly fundraise and fund projects.
I think the problems with selecting members mentioned in this thread are overstated. Any political party faces the same problem. I suspect that in practice, strategically recruiting weakly engaged EAs just isn't a big problem. But it could be either mitigated by requiring members to meet any of the conditions you mentioned (fees, EA org employment, course certificate), or setting a number of votes per regions, e.g. based on similar indicators of the # of engaged members.
Personally, I'm sufficiently satisfied with the general CEA agenda, that I suspect this would be a waste of effort. That's in part because I think highly engaged EAs who dominate these orgs have more philosophically robust views and in part because I don't think this competitor organization would be able to raise more than 10 % of CEA's budget (~80 % of it comes from OpenPhil). So, given the main goal of funding projects, I don't think this org would be sufficiently better to be worth all the costs - and not just costs inherent in the operations, but also the emotional costs of having these debates publicly and the costs of coordinating "who is willing to fund what" which I imagine might already be a nightmare.
2) A union. A soft counter-power to CEA.
If this org's only power were the possibility to strike or produce resolutions, I'm concerned this would artificially inflate unproductive discord. My impression is that unions often produce irrational policies perhaps because they only have quite extreme measures at their disposal, which creates an illusory "us vs. them" aesthetics for relationships that are overall very positive-sum.
However, I have some sympathy for the idea of
3) A community ambassador who would be democratically voted e.g. by all EA Forum members and who's job would be to facilitate the communication between CEA and the community in both directions. I imagine someone at CEA might already effectively hold this job, so perhaps they would be interested in having their choice ratified by the community. Ideally, this community ambassador would collect people's concerns and visit CEA board meetings, in order to be able to integrate both perspectives.
However, I think the cost of this position is non-negligible. Given the power-law distribution of impact among people and given the many rounds of tests, which employees at EA organizations allegedly undergo - a democratic vote would probably yield a much less discerning choice (as most people wouldn't spend more than 30 minutes picking a candidate). I'm not sure to what extent the wisdom of the crowd might apply here.
Because of similar uncertainties and because I wouldn't count this as a "leadership role", I'm voting "moderately disagree".
Yeah, as you conclude in your second paragraph, I wouldn’t describe CEA as simply “funding the meta cause area”. They don’t control major grant budgets (unlike Open Phil or EA Funds (although they have just announced EA Funds will become part of CEA)), and they’re not primarily in the business of choosing which projects get resourced (apart from choosing which EAGx events and national orgs get funding). Instead, their theory of change centres on building community infrastructure that helps two broad groups:
- People unfamiliar with EA but who might be interes
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