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Giving What We Can

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13-474: Giving What We Can ( GWWC ) is a group of charities promoting effective giving whose members pledge to give at least 10% of their income to effective charities. It was founded at Oxford University in 2009 by the philosopher Toby Ord , physician-in-training Bernadette Young (Ord's wife), and fellow philosopher William MacAskill . Giving What We Can was founded as a giving society in 2009 by Toby Ord , an ethics researcher at Oxford , his wife Bernadette Young,

26-453: A list of individual charities that cover a wide range of causes including global poverty alleviation , animal welfare and the welfare of future generations. Giving What We Can used to conduct research to determine which charities it would recommend for members and other people to support. It differed from other charity evaluators in terms of the importance given to metrics of charity performance. While evaluators such as Charity Navigator used

39-555: A physician in training at the time, and fellow ethicist William MacAskill with the goal of encouraging people to give at least 10% of their income on a regular basis to alleviate world poverty. This is similar to Ma'aser kesafim (giving 10% of income) in Jewish tradition and zakat in Islam, but Ord said there was no religious motivation behind it. Ord cited writings from Peter Singer and Thomas Pogge about one's moral duty to give to

52-677: A selected few charities in the area of global health . Its work was therefore similar to that of GiveWell. In 2017, the Centre for Effective Altruism stopped conducting original research into giving opportunities based on significant overlap with organisations like GiveWell and the Open Philanthropy Project . The shared ground of all Giving What We Can members is that they have committed to providing at least 10% of their income by signing "The 10% Pledge". Therefore, members often refer to themselves as "pledgers". The 10% pledge

65-480: Is a voluntary and non-legal commitment to donate 10% or more of one's income. This figure is the minimum percentage and was chosen because it has a good balance. It is a significant proportion of income, in recognition of the importance of the problem and the need for real action. But it is also within the reach of most people in the developed world. Some members decide to go further and commit to donating 20% or even 50%. Some members decide to go even further and perform

78-639: Is also among those who have made a similar pledge. Because some people may be interested in GWWC but not yet ready to take the pledge, it is also possible to make a temporary commitment called "The Trial Pledge". This involves making a commitment to donate at least 1% of one's income for a specified period of time. In 2020, GWWC launched the option for companies to also declare their commitment to donating to effective organizations. In this case, companies commit to donate at least 10% of their net profits to effective charities. By 2024, 49 companies had signed up. By 2012

91-409: The "Further Pledge". Founder Toby Ord further pledged to donate anything he earned over £20,000 a year, based on his conviction that he could live comfortably and happily on this income. This level of commitment is called "The Further Pledge". The member defines a basic annual income that they expect to live on. All income above this level will be donated to effective measures. Co-founder Will MacAskill

104-401: The developing world, and could pledge more; there was no penalty for quitting. By the end of 2011 it had 177 members, mostly other academics, in five chapters including Oxford , Cambridge , Princeton , and Harvard . By November 2011, the organisation was providing its members regular reports on what charities were most effective at addressing poverty in the developing world, and at that time

117-522: The fraction of donations spent on program expenses versus administrative overhead as an important indicator, Giving What We Can solely focused on the cost-effectiveness of the charity's work. It believed that the variance in cost-effectiveness of charities arose largely due to the variance in the nature of the causes that the charities operate in, and therefore made evaluations across broad areas of work such as health, education, and emergency aid before comparing specific organisations. In practice, it recommended

130-759: The group had 264 people from 17 countries. It surpassed 1,000 members in 2015 and 5,000 members in 2020. Since its inception in 2009 the Giving What We Can Pledge was signed by various prominent individuals: Effective giving Too Many Requests If you report this error to the Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.226 via cp1108 cp1108, Varnish XID 229475961 Upstream caches: cp1108 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 08:35:55 GMT GiveWell Too Many Requests If you report this error to

143-479: The poor as inspiration for starting the organisation, and personally planned to give away everything above about $ 28,000 a year, the median after-tax salary in the U.K. His focus was on effective giving , meaning that he emphasised donations to charities which saved a maximal amount of life per donation amount. GWWC was launched with 23 members. People who joined signed a pledge to give away 10% of their income to any organisation they thought could best address poverty in

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156-559: Was recommending a tropical diseases group and a de-worming group that each worked in Africa. Ord relied in part on research conducted by GiveWell , and also used the concept of the quality-adjusted life-year to gauge effectiveness of charities. In 2011, a sister organisation at Oxford led by MacAskill and others called "High Impact Careers" was spun off from Giving What We Can. This organisation encouraged people to pursue high-paying jobs so they could give more money away. High Impact Careers

169-485: Was soon renamed to 80,000 Hours . In 2012 the two organisations incorporated the Centre for Effective Altruism as a nonprofit to serve as an umbrella organisation. In 2024, Giving What We Can became its own legal entity again. In 2017, Giving What We Can stopped conducting original research but rather started to recommend to its members to follow the advice by charity evaluators such as GiveWell, Animal Charity Evaluators and Founders Pledge . Additionally, they recommend

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