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Remote Summer Internship, 2025

Open Philanthropy is looking for interns to help us conduct further research within our Global Health and Wellbeing (GHW) Cause Prioritization, Global Catastrophic Risks (GCR) Cause Prioritization, and Farm Animal Welfare (FAW) teams. The internship will run from June through August 2025. It is open to students currently enrolled in or have completed a Master’s or PhD, students starting a Master’s or PhD program in 2025, or candidates working for an organization that offers externship/secondment opportunities.

About Open Philanthropy
Open Philanthropy is a philanthropic funder and advisor; our mission is to help others as much as we can with the resources available to us. We stress openness to many possibilities and have chosen our focus areas based on importance, neglectedness, and tractability. Our current giving areas include potential risks from advanced artificial intelligence, global health research & development, global public health policy, scientific research, global aid policy, farm animal welfare, innovation policy, effective altruism, and biosecurity and pandemic preparedness. In 2023, we recommended just under $800 million to high-impact causes, and we’ve recommended over $3 billion in grants since our formation.

Summer Internship, 2025
Location
Remote – Global

Type
Full time

Department
Grantmaking

Deadline to Apply
13 January 2025 at 09:00 GMT+1

Overview
Application
Open Philanthropy is looking for interns to help us conduct further research within our Global Health and Wellbeing (GHW) Cause Prioritization, Global Catastrophic Risks (GCR) Cause Prioritization, and Farm Animal Welfare (FAW) teams. The internship will run from June through August 2025. It is open to students currently enrolled in or have completed a Master’s or PhD, students starting a Master’s or PhD program in 2025, or candidates working for an organization that offers externship/secondment opportunities.

About Open Philanthropy
Open Philanthropy is a philanthropic funder and advisor; our mission is to help others as much as we can with the resources available to us. We stress openness to many possibilities and have chosen our focus areas based on importance, neglectedness, and tractability. Our current giving areas include potential risks from advanced artificial intelligence, global health research & development, global public health policy, scientific research, global aid policy, farm animal welfare, innovation policy, effective altruism, and biosecurity and pandemic preparedness. In 2023, we recommended just under $800 million to high-impact causes, and we’ve recommended over $3 billion in grants since our formation.

About our teams
Global Health and Wellbeing (GHW) Cause Prioritization

The Global Health and Wellbeing (GHW) team focuses on making grants across scientific research, policy advocacy, and global development to advance our mission of helping others as much as we can with the resources available to us. We prioritize grants that have the potential to improve health outcomes and economic wellbeing, with a particular focus on people living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

Within GHW, the Cause Prioritization team, which will host the internship, works closely with senior leadership and program officers to conduct research that improves our grantmaking and high-level strategy. We investigate potential new cause areas, prioritize across causes, recommend new grants, evaluate our past work, and translate research insights into recommendations for internal and external decision-makers. Past work by Research and Strategy Fellows on the GHW Cause Prioritization team includes shallow investigations into potential new cause areas like Telecommunications in LMICs and Civil Conflict Reduction, more in-depth research leading to the launch of our most recent GHW cause areas in Global Public Health Policy and Economic Growth in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, and running the $150 million Regranting Challenge.

Global Catastrophic Risks (GCR) Cause Prioritization

The Global Catastrophic Risks (GCR) team works across focus areas aimed at reducing the chances of events that might cause major harm on a global scale. The Global Catastrophic Risks Cause Prioritization team focuses on investigating potential new cause areas, evaluating existing cause areas, advancing research agendas within cause areas, and informing high-level strategy within GCR. The team’s main focus areas are risks from advanced artificial intelligence and biosecurity. These areas, like the rest of Open Philanthropy’s focus areas, were chosen after extensive research (see here for our investigation on Biosecurity and here for Potential Risks from Advanced Artificial Intelligence).

Farm Animal Welfare (FAW)

The Farm Animal Welfare team works to identify the most promising opportunities for grantmaking to help animals confined on factory farms. The FAW team supports over 100 grantees worldwide, who use various tactics including corporate campaigns, legislative advocacy, and animal product alternatives. You can read more about our program’s strategy and past grantmaking here. The intern will work with the two-person FAW research team on strategy evaluation, cost-effectiveness modeling, and targeted research to support grantmaking.

Summer Internship, 2025
Location
Remote – Global

Type
Full time

Department
Grantmaking

Deadline to Apply
13 January 2025 at 09:00 GMT+1

Overview
Application
Open Philanthropy is looking for interns to help us conduct further research within our Global Health and Wellbeing (GHW) Cause Prioritization, Global Catastrophic Risks (GCR) Cause Prioritization, and Farm Animal Welfare (FAW) teams. The internship will run from June through August 2025. It is open to students currently enrolled in or have completed a Master’s or PhD, students starting a Master’s or PhD program in 2025, or candidates working for an organization that offers externship/secondment opportunities.

About Open Philanthropy
Open Philanthropy is a philanthropic funder and advisor; our mission is to help others as much as we can with the resources available to us. We stress openness to many possibilities and have chosen our focus areas based on importance, neglectedness, and tractability. Our current giving areas include potential risks from advanced artificial intelligence, global health research & development, global public health policy, scientific research, global aid policy, farm animal welfare, innovation policy, effective altruism, and biosecurity and pandemic preparedness. In 2023, we recommended just under $800 million to high-impact causes, and we’ve recommended over $3 billion in grants since our formation.

About our teams
Global Health and Wellbeing (GHW) Cause Prioritization

The Global Health and Wellbeing (GHW) team focuses on making grants across scientific research, policy advocacy, and global development to advance our mission of helping others as much as we can with the resources available to us. We prioritize grants that have the potential to improve health outcomes and economic wellbeing, with a particular focus on people living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

Within GHW, the Cause Prioritization team, which will host the internship, works closely with senior leadership and program officers to conduct research that improves our grantmaking and high-level strategy. We investigate potential new cause areas, prioritize across causes, recommend new grants, evaluate our past work, and translate research insights into recommendations for internal and external decision-makers. Past work by Research and Strategy Fellows on the GHW Cause Prioritization team includes shallow investigations into potential new cause areas like Telecommunications in LMICs and Civil Conflict Reduction, more in-depth research leading to the launch of our most recent GHW cause areas in Global Public Health Policy and Economic Growth in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, and running the $150 million Regranting Challenge.

Global Catastrophic Risks (GCR) Cause Prioritization

The Global Catastrophic Risks (GCR) team works across focus areas aimed at reducing the chances of events that might cause major harm on a global scale. The Global Catastrophic Risks Cause Prioritization team focuses on investigating potential new cause areas, evaluating existing cause areas, advancing research agendas within cause areas, and informing high-level strategy within GCR. The team’s main focus areas are risks from advanced artificial intelligence and biosecurity. These areas, like the rest of Open Philanthropy’s focus areas, were chosen after extensive research (see here for our investigation on Biosecurity and here for Potential Risks from Advanced Artificial Intelligence).

Farm Animal Welfare (FAW)

The Farm Animal Welfare team works to identify the most promising opportunities for grantmaking to help animals confined on factory farms. The FAW team supports over 100 grantees worldwide, who use various tactics including corporate campaigns, legislative advocacy, and animal product alternatives. You can read more about our program’s strategy and past grantmaking here. The intern will work with the two-person FAW research team on strategy evaluation, cost-effectiveness modeling, and targeted research to support grantmaking.

About the internship
We plan to hire 7-9 interns for Summer 2025 (June–August 2025) across the following distribution:

4 internships within the GHW Cause Prioritization team.

2-4 internships within the GCR Cause Prioritization team.

1 internship within the Farm Animal Welfare team.

Within the GHW and GCR Cause Prioritization teams, we offer two distinct tracks: Research and Strategy. The responsibilities for these tracks largely overlap, and candidates for both positions will be evaluated using the same application materials. The main difference is one of emphasis: while Research track interns primarily focus on core research (such as evaluating how promising a potential new cause is), Strategy track interns are sometimes tasked with working on non-research projects (such as running an external request for research proposals).

As such, the Research track may be ideal for those who are comfortable critically evaluating scientific evidence and research methodologies in fields like economics, political science, public health, epidemiology, or medical science. The Strategy track may be better suited to people with consulting, policy, or similar strategic experience. You will be asked to indicate your preferred track in the application, but we may decide to consider you for the team or track we believe aligns best with your skills and experience.

What you’ll do
Interns will work on multiple projects at different levels of depth, similar to a full-time team member. Each intern will report to an existing team member and be assigned specific projects, which will depend on the team’s needs and the intern’s skills. Core responsibilities include:

Conducting research to assess potential cause areas, evaluate programs, and inform overall strategy.

Collaborating with team members and presenting findings in team meetings.

Typical project tasks may include:

Talking to global experts, reviewing reports and academic papers, and working with potential grantees to evaluate whether a potential cause area is important, neglected, and tractable.

Creating back-of-the-envelope calculations to estimate the social returns and cost-effectiveness of potential grants.

Managing time between gathering new information and synthesizing it into concrete recommendations.

Who we’re looking for
We’re open to hiring students who are currently enrolled in or have completed a Master’s or PhD program, candidates who will begin a Master’s or PhD program in 2025, or candidates working for an organization that offers externship/secondment opportunities.

Process and timelines
Our process for all GHW, GCR, and FAW team internships will include:

An initial application

A take-home work test

Final interviews with Open Phil team members

After reviewing applications, we will reach out to candidates in late January with an update. Shortlisted candidates will be invited to submit a work test in February. We hope to make internship offers by the end of March 2025.

GHW internships will run for 9-10 weeks between June and August 2025, though these dates are somewhat flexible. If your current University program doesn’t allow a 9-10 week internship during that time, but you would be able to commit for at least 5 weeks, please let us know your dates in the application form and we will try to find alternative arrangements (e.g., a shorter internship or continuing with a part-time work arrangement).

GCR internships will start on 9 June and conclude in 10 weeks, i.e., by 15 August.

The FAW internship is flexible, though we think the best time to start would be between June and August 2025.

If you need assistance or an accommodation due to a disability, or have any other questions about applying, please contact jobs@openphilanthropy.org.

Please apply by 11:59 pm Pacific Time on Sunday, 12 January 2025 to be considered.

Apply here: https://jobstoapply.com/job/summer-internship-2025/

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Digital Media & Innovation for Development Programme (DIDP)

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iLEAD AFRICA is a dynamic leadership and social innovation hub that harnesses the power of digital technologies to empower young people and marginalized communities. It focuses on capacity building, policy influencing and digital advocacy, with thematic areas on youth leadership, democratic governance, digital advocacy and sustainable development.
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Communication Fellowship 2025

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The Club of Rome has established a Communication Fellowship, an annual mentoring program that aims to increase the diversity of voices addressing sustainable development issues and support early-career communication professionals from most countries around the world. The fellowship aims to create a network of passionate Club of Rome communication specialists around the world who can share information and best practices.
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A bachelor’s degree or equivalent in science or journalism, and/or a current or graduate student in a science journalism program.
Some experience writing about systems thinking or sustainability research for non-specialist audiences via blogs, journals, academic websites or other media OR experience producing multimedia content on relevant topics.
Written and oral proficiency in English and a proven ability to understand complex scientific research or systems thinking. Experience or interest in social media, video, photography or other multimedia media.
Alignment with the beliefs and vision of the Club of Rome.
Applicants from all countries are welcome, but priority will be given to citizens or residents of countries from most parts of the world.
Applications:
To apply, please send the following documents to Jobs@clubofrome.org with the subject: Communication Scholarship.
CV / Curriculum vitae
Covering letter
A sample essay (in English) of up to 800 words on a scientific topic or sustainability issue intended for a general audience. Apply before March 9, 2025.

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