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How CE Selects Cause Areas

Updated: Dec 9, 2021


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It's highly valuable for an organization to clearly and transparently specify its cause area preferences, and although Charity Entrepreneurship has written considerably about our process of intervention selection, we have not done so for our cause area selection process. CE is a unique organization in that it benefits quite significantly from rotating through cause areas over time. The number of talented founders and promising new charity ideas in any given cause area is limited. So, focusing on multiple cause areas over the years has allowed significantly more charities to be founded than if we had worked on a single area consistently. Still, even when taking into consideration the fact that rotating cause areas is worth doing and thus CE does not need to pick a singular one, the question of how these decisions are made and what factors play into them remains. Here are a few of the considerations we make when picking a new cause area: EA ethics: Our cause selection principles are value-wise very in line with the EA movement, using consequentialist, ethical frameworks. In which areas can most lives be saved or improved? Our first two cause areas (global health and farmed animal welfare) were those that the EA movement thinks are highly promising - and, after all, a huge % of our staff team comes from said movement. Empirical data: We tend to weigh empirical evidence highly, higher even than most in the EA movement. In general, scientific evidence, quick feedback loops, and high levels of skepticism are all important epistemic considerations that we examine closely for every cause we look at. Cause X: We think there are many possible impactful cause areas that have not yet been discovered by us or the EA movement, but could be similarly promising from plausible ethical and epistemic perspectives. We followed the growth of mental health and environmentalism as EA cause areas and independently researched them before incubating related charities. We also worked in family planning and policy, areas that have not been investigated deeply by EA but our team thought had promise. We aim for every idea that we recommend to be in the range of top ideas from our most classical areas (global health and animals). Meaning, if we researched a cause area and could not find ideas on par with our top ideas in other areas, we would not recommend any. That being said, we think comparing top ideas between causes is tricky and can often come down to calls that reasonable experts would disagree on. In such cases, we try to make the judgment calls clear and leave them up to the founders.

13 Comments


Julia Cooper
Julia Cooper
Sep 23

Aapka detailed breakdown bohot insightful hai, especially the way CE balances EA ethics, empirical data, aur Cause X exploration. Mujhe yeh cheez pasand aayi ke aap sirf theoretical frameworks pe rely nahi karte, balki real-world feedback loops aur data-driven evidence ko bhi deeply evaluate karte ho. Yeh approach mujhe us tarah yaad dilata hai jaise hum complex problems ko solve karte waqt precision aur clarity ke liye significant figures calculator use karte hain har chhoti detail matter karti hai, aur final outcome ko reliable banati hai.

Mujhe lagta hai CE ka rotating cause areas ka model long-term impact ke liye kaafi sustainable hai, kyunki ek hi area pe stick rehne ki wajah se fresh ideas aur innovation ka scope limited ho…

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Grace Thompson
Grace Thompson
Sep 23

This is a very clear and transparent explanation — I like how CE balances EA ethics with strong reliance on empirical data. The fact that you rotate through different cause areas makes a lot of sense, especially since it gives more room for fresh ideas and founders rather than being locked into one domain.

The “Cause X” approach is also fascinating. It shows openness to exploring areas that haven’t yet been deeply researched by EA but could be impactful in the long run. That kind of flexibility is crucial when trying to maximize positive outcomes.

I think the challenge of comparing top ideas between different cause areas is something many organizations face, and your honesty in acknowledging the role of…

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lili xie
lili xie
Sep 10

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yaqian zhang
yaqian zhang
Sep 10

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Kevin Huis
Kevin Huis
Aug 25

The way CE explains its process for choosing cause areas is very clear, and the focus on evidence reminds me of how block blast puzzle games downloadable content adds depth and new layers to the experience.

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Charity Entrepreneurship (CE) is a registered charity in England and Wales (Charity Number 1195850). CE supports its incubated charities through a fiscal sponsorship with Players Philanthropy Fund (Federal Tax ID: 27-6601178, ppf.org/pp), a Maryland charitable trust with federal tax-exempt status as a public charity under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.


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