Research project idea: Impact assessment of nuclear-risk-related orgs, programmes, movements, etc.

By MichaelA🔸 @ 2023-04-15T14:39 (+13)

This post is part of a series of rough posts on nuclear risk research ideas. I strongly recommend that, before you read this post, you read the series’ summary & introduction post for context, caveats, and to see the list of other ideas. One caveat that’s especially worth flagging here is that I drafted this in late 2021 and haven’t updated it much since. I’m grateful to Will Aldred for help with this series.

One reason I'm publishing this now is to serve as one menu of research project ideas for upcoming summer research fellowships.

Some tentative bottom-line views about this project idea

ImportanceTractabilityNeglectednessOutsourceability
MediumMediumMediumMedium

What is this idea? How could it be tackled?

Many of the organizations, programmes, movements, policies, “intermediate goals” (see Aird & Aldred, 2022), interventions, etc. that might be worth supporting to reduce nuclear risk already have a track record and/or are similar to things that have track records. So our decisions about what to support could be informed by the empirical evidence those track records provide. In particular, for each thing we’re considering supporting, we could consider questions like:

These questions could be tackled via activities such as:

This is really more like a type of project than a specific project idea; which specific organisations, programmes, movements, etc., one focuses on would substantially affect what impacts this project would have, how long it’d take, how best to pursue it, etc.

Note that some insights from this project could also be useful for decisions about whether and how to try to try to influence various countries’ foreign, national security, or technology policies in contexts other than nuclear risk (e.g., for AI risk or biosecurity).

What sort of person might be a good fit for this?

I expect any good generalist researcher could provide a useful analysis of these questions. I expect someone to be a stronger fit the more experience they have with history research, investigative journalism, cost-effectiveness modelling, or impact assessment, or the more they’re the sort of person who’d be interested in and good at using those methodologies.

Some relevant previous work

I could also probably share on request some unpolished notes and further links on the TPNW in particular.

  1. ^

     See also Rodriguez (2019).