Careers (to help animals) in politics, policy, and lobbying

By Jamie_Harris @ 2020-08-30T10:37 (+32)

Animal Advocacy Careers have now released our fourth skills profile. This one is about politics, policy, and lobbying.

By reading this profile we hope that you can build a better understanding of whether seeking to develop politics, policy, and lobbying expertise seems like one of the best ways for you to use your time in order to help animals.Summary:


96758 @ 2020-08-31T14:42 (+3)

This is an awesome guide - thank you for writing it, Jamie and Animal Advocacy Careers!

Below are some relevant links - though these are mainly focussed on the UK.

UK political party animal groups:

https://www.conservativeanimalwelfarefoundation.org/

http://www.labouranimalwelfaresociety.org.uk/

https://gap.greenparty.org.uk/

Other UK political parties may have similar sub-groups, too.

I'm not sure whether similar groups exist in other countries. (If not, maybe setting them up could be a high-leverage intervention?)

There's also a UK political party for animals - the Animal Welfare Party: https://www.animalwelfareparty.org/

General 80k blog post on UK political careers - short and sweet:

https://80000hours.org/2016/01/10-steps-to-a-job-in-politics/

A careers guide for policy/politics jobs (mainly relevant to the UK):

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Gillman-Politicos-Politics-Government-Paperback/dp/B00RWLQRBG/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=gillman+sally+politicos&qid=1598471998&sr=8-1

jared_m @ 2020-09-01T02:01 (+1)

In the U.S. (and perhaps other countries) I expect there is an unrealized opportunity for animal welfare advocates to collaborate with libertarian organizations like Cato and R Street. There could be a productive "strange bedfellows" alliance in the fight against socially and ethically damaging subsidies - for both meat and feed stocks - that enable domestic meat industries to thrive rather than retract.

To quote the R Street link below: "For too long, American agriculture has been overly dependent on domestic subsidies... American farmers and ranchers want the chance to sell their products, not have to wait for a government handout."

96758 @ 2020-09-01T09:33 (+2)

As an aside...(re conservatives, not libertarians) here is Ben Shapiro saying to Jonathan Safran Foer that he thinks that in 100 years people will look back on eating animals as a bad thing - 33 min: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GU-yTOYQl4

jared_m @ 2020-09-11T00:04 (+1)

Thanks for sharing! That is an incongruous pair - but I wouldn't be surprised if the number of vocal conservative vegetarians grows over the coming years as the cost of coming out as a vegetarian or vegan loses its stigma in some corners of the conservative movement(s) In OECD countries, and the need for preference falsification erodes.