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Call for Papers

Theme: Global Priorities
Type: EAGxAustralia 2020 Workshop
Institution: Australian National University
Location: Canberra, ACT (Australia)
Date: 26.–27.9.2020
Deadline: 9.4.2020

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We are delighted to announce that, in 2020, we will be running the
first EAGxAustralia Workshop on Global Priorities. This two-day
interdisciplinary workshop will be held at the Australian National
University from the 26th to 27th of September, in conjunction with
the EAGxAustralia conference.

The aim of this workshop is to bring attention to academic work
within the fields of economics and philosophy that falls under the
banner of global priorities research: an emerging field which looks
at issues which arise in response to the question, ‘What should we do
with a given amount of limited resources if our aim is to do the most
good (impartially construed)?’

Agents seeking to use their resources to do the most good – for
instance, many in the effective altruism community – must prioritise
among many different global problems, and many means of tackling
them. This priority-setting requires answers to thorny questions,
both normative and descriptive, and both philosophical and applied.
It is these questions which the workshop (and global priorities
research more broadly) seeks to answer.


Here are some examples of such questions.

From economics: 

- How does the variation of the cost-effectiveness of interventions
within social causes compare to the variation of cost-effectiveness
among causes?

- When faced with the opportunity to purchase small probabilities of
astronomical welfare payoffs, can altruistic actors rationally depart
from expected utility maximization?

- Given the ethical implications of discounting across generations,
and the empirical difficulties of estimating time preference in the
absence of long-term investments, how should we discount costs and
benefits that occur in the distant future?

- How can economic tools most rigorously be used to estimate policy
and intervention impacts on animal welfare (as distinct from human
preferences regarding animal welfare)? 

- How, concretely, should we adapt (endogenous) growth models to
weigh the benefits that growth may pose for the long term against the
catastrophic risks that may come with technological development? 

- How can mainstream cost-benefit analysis methodology most
fruitfully be generalized so as to account for policies’ impacts on
future populations’ identities and sizes, under various views in
population ethics?

- How can institutional mechanisms be designed so as to incorporate
the interests of future generations?

- What forecasting methods, if any, are well-suited to long-term
prediction?

- What characteristics of individuals and choice-contexts predict
‘pure’ vs. ‘warm glow’ altruistic behaviour?

- How can results from the mechanism design literature help
altruistic individuals and organisations to coordinate in a more
effective manner? 

- What is the best feasible voting system from the perspective of
impartial welfarism? 


From philosophy:

- Are we both rationally and morally required to maximise expected
moral value, even when doing so involves producing extremely low
probabilities of extremely high payoffs?

- What form/s of welfare should altruists promote (and what does this
imply in practice)?

- Should we accept longtermism: the view that the primary determinant
of the differences in moral value of the actions we take today is the
effect of those actions on the very long-term future? And, in
practice, what actions should a longtermist take?

- How should we compare benefits to humans and to non-human animals?

- How can we measure the welfare of non-human animals (and what do
these methods imply in practice)?

- Do we have moral reasons to bring future persons into existence,
and how do these compare to our reasons to benefit present (or
necessary) persons?

- How might other duties (e.g., those arising from issues of justice)
interfere with duties of beneficence?

- How should altruists respond to uncertainty over which moral
theories are correct?

- To what extent should a government take actions that are better for
the world even if they conflict with the interests of their own
citizens?

- How should we respond to different forms of evidence about how
effective different actions are in promoting value?

For further examples, see the research agenda of the Global
Priorities Institute at the University of Oxford:
https://globalprioritiesinstitute.org/research-agenda-web-version-2


Call for Abstracts

Attendance is open to academics from all fields and interested
members of the public.

Submissions may be on any topic relevant to global priority-setting,
whether featured above or not. They may be from any area of
philosophy or economics, as well as other relevant disciplines
(although we expect that the majority of papers at this workshop will
come from philosophy and economics). And we strongly encourage
submissions from researchers in groups underrepresented in academic
philosophy and economics, including women and people of colour.

To present at the workshop, please submit an extended abstract of 600
words or less to works...@eagxaustralia.com, making clear how the
paper is relevant to the question of how to do the most good with
limited resources. Papers should be suitable for a 45-minute
presentation (including questions). If you would prefer an
alternative or shorter format – for instance, for a work-in-progress
talk – please let us know when you submit. The deadline is April 9th.
Successful applicants will be notified at most one month after the
deadline.

We have some funding available to cover accommodation and (domestic)
travel for speakers, as well as for graduate students who attend.
This funding will be allocated on the basis of need, and we encourage
attendees to use their own institutional funding if available so that
we can fund others. If you require funding, please let us know when
you submit or otherwise by email at works...@eagxaustralia.com.

Presenters will also have the opportunity to have their talks
professionally filmed and published on YouTube.


Our invited speakers for the workshop include:

- Andreas Mogensen (Oxford, Philosophy)
- John Quiggin (UQ, Economics)
- Simon Grant (ANU, Economics)
- Alan Hájek (ANU, Philosophy)
- Katie Steele (ANU, Philosophy)
- Eva Vivalt (tentative; ANU, Economics)


Conveners:

Timothy Williamson (ANU)
Ben Grodeck (Monash)


Conference website:
https://www.eagxaustralia.com/workshop-on-global-priorities/




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