Wild Animal Initiative
Archived ReviewReview Published: | 2021 |
Current Version | 2023 |
Archived Version: 2021
What does Wild Animal Initiative do?
Wild Animal Initiative was founded in 2019. Wild Animal Initiative currently operates in the U.S., where they work to strengthen the animal advocacy movement through creating an academic field dedicated to wild animal welfare. They compile literature reviews, write theoretical and opinion articles, and publish research results on their website and/or in peer-reviewed journals. Wild Animal Initiative focuses on identifying and sharing possible research avenues and connecting with more established fields. They also work with researchers from various academic and non-academic institutions to identify potential collaborators, and they recently launched a grant assistance program. Wild Animal Initiative also co-organizes the annual Wild Animal Welfare Summit and hosts discussions at conferences.
What are their strengths?
Wild Animal Initiative focuses exclusively on helping wild animals, which we believe could be a high-impact cause area. They produce research and build alliances to create a new academic field dedicated to wild animal welfare, both of which we believe are highly effective interventions to strengthen the animal advocacy movement. Wild Animal Initiative’s outreach program—which consists of engaging researchers interested in wild animal welfare research via presentations, discussions, and meetings—seems to be particularly cost effective, because established academics have more resources to scale up research in this growing field.
What are their weaknesses?
There is currently no empirical evidence that reviews the effectiveness of movement building in animal advocacy. However, we believe that capacity-building projects have the potential to help animals indirectly by increasing the effectiveness of other projects and organizations. We are uncertain about the cost effectiveness of Wild Animal Initiative’s grantmaking program due to its newness. (The program was launched in 2021.)
Why did Wild Animal Initiative receive our top recommendation?
Wild Animal Initiative is working in an important and relatively neglected area: conducting and promoting research to help wild animals. We believe that building an academic field is an ambitious but promising avenue to create change for wild animals in the longer term. There are few charities working in this area, and Wild Animal Initiative seems to have a responsible and thorough approach to building a collaborative community of researchers and advocates. Wild Animal Initiative also seems to have a strong strategy and a healthy organizational culture.
We find Wild Animal Initiative to be an excellent giving opportunity because of their strong programs aimed at strengthening the animal advocacy movement.
How much money could they use?
We believe that overall, Wild Animal Initiative continues to have room for $1,772,000 of additional funding in 2022 and $1,685,000 in 2023. We expect that they would use additional funds to hire additional staff and expand existing programs. They are also considering starting or supporting a project on public policy and wild animals.
Wild Animal Initiative has been one of ACE’s Top Charities since November 2020. They received one ACE Movement Grant in fall 2019 and one in summer 2020.
Programs
A charity that performs well on this criterion has programs that we expect are highly effective in reducing the suffering of animals. The key aspects that ACE considers when examining a charity’s programs are reviewed in detail below.
Method
In this criterion, we assess the effectiveness of each of the charity’s programs by analyzing (i) the interventions each program uses, (ii) the outcomes those interventions work toward, (iii) the countries in which the program takes place, and (iv) the groups of animals the program affects. We use information supplied by the charity to provide a more detailed analysis of each of these four factors. Our assessment of each intervention is informed by our research briefs and other relevant research.
At the beginning of our evaluation process, we select charities that we believe have the most effective programs. This year, we considered a comprehensive list of animal advocacy charities that focus on improving the lives of farmed or wild animals. We selected farmed animal charities based on the outcomes they work toward, the regions they work in, and the specific animal group(s) their programs target. We don’t currently consider animal group(s) targeted as part of our evaluation for wild animal charities, as the number of charities working on the welfare of wild animals is very small.
Outcomes
We categorize the work of animal advocacy charities by their outcomes, broadly distinguishing whether interventions focus on individual or institutional change. Individual-focused interventions often involve decreasing the consumption of animal products, increasing the prevalence of anti-speciesist values, or providing direct help to animals. Institutional change involves improving animal welfare standards, increasing the availability of animal-free products, or strengthening the animal advocacy movement.
We believe that changing individual habits and beliefs is difficult to achieve through individual outreach. Currently, we find the arguments for an institution-focused approach1 more compelling than individual-focused approaches. We believe that raising welfare standards increases animal welfare for a large number of animals in the short term2 and may contribute to transforming markets in the long run.3 Increasing the availability of animal-free foods, e.g., by bringing new, affordable products to the market or providing more plant-based menu options, can provide a convenient opportunity for people to choose more plant-based options. Moreover, we believe that efforts to strengthen the animal advocacy movement, e.g., by improving organizational effectiveness and building alliances, can support all other outcomes and may be relatively neglected.
Therefore, when considering charities to evaluate, we prioritize those that work to improve welfare standards, increase the availability of animal-free products, or strengthen the animal advocacy movement. We give lower priority to charities that focus on decreasing the consumption of animal products, increasing the prevalence of anti-speciesist values, or providing direct help to animals. Charities selected for evaluation are sent a request for more in-depth information about their programs and the specific interventions they use. We then present and assess each of the charities’ programs. In line with our commitment to following empirical evidence and logical reasoning, we use existing research to inform our assessments and explain our thinking about the effectiveness of different interventions.
Countries
A charity’s countries and regions of operations can affect their work with regard to scale, neglectedness, and tractability. We prioritize charities in countries with relatively large animal agricultural industries, few other charities engaged in similar work, and in which animal advocacy is likely to be feasible and have a lasting impact. In our charity selection process, we used Mercy For Animals’ Farmed Animal Opportunity Index (FAOI), which combines proxies for scale, tractability, and global influence to create country scores.4 To assess neglectedness, we used our own data on the number of organizations that we are aware of working in each country. Below we present these measures for the countries that Wild Animal Initiative operates in.
Animal groups
We prioritize programs targeting specific groups of animals that are affected in large numbers5 and receive relatively little attention in animal advocacy. Of the 187 billion farmed vertebrate animals killed annually for food globally, 110 billion are farmed fishes and 66.6 billion are farmed chickens, making these impactful groups to focus on. There are at least 100 times as many wild vertebrates as there are farmed vertebrates.6 Given the large number of wild animals and the small number of organizations working on their welfare, we believe wild animal advocacy also has potential for high impact despite its lower tractability.
We recognize the enormous scale of invertebrates, both farmed7 and wild, and would like to see more resources go toward this group of animals. Because of the vast differences between invertebrate species and the state of evidence considering their sentience, programs need to be considered and prioritized on a case-by-case basis. However, because of the large number of individuals involved and the underrepresentation of invertebrate issues in the animal advocacy movement, we consider more programs advocating for them to be a priority. We believe the evidence regarding the sentience of any invertebrate species is inconclusive, but we believe that there are enough signs of potential sentience8 to err on the side of caution—especially considering the vast numbers of invertebrates and the high neglectedness of this issue.9
A note about long-term impact
Each charity’s long-term impact is plausibly what matters most.10 The potential number of animals affected increases over time due to population growth and an accumulation of generations. Thus, we would expect that the long-term impacts of an action would likely affect more animals than the short-term impacts of the same action. Nevertheless, we are highly uncertain about the particular long-term effects of each intervention. Because of this uncertainty, our reasoning about each charity’s impact (along with our diagrams) may skew toward overemphasizing short-term effects.
Information and Analysis
Cause areas
Wild Animal Initiative’s programs focus exclusively on helping wild animals, which we think is a high-priority cause area.
Countries
Wild Animal Initiative develops their programs primarily in the U.S. and the U.K. Our analysis of scale, tractability, and neglectedness across different regions is focused on farmed animal advocacy, so it does not apply to Wild Animal Initiative’s work.
Description of programs
Wild Animal Initiative takes various approaches to achieving change for animals, including research and movement building. Under our current menu of outcomes, these approaches are all included under the outcome of strengthening the animal advocacy movement.
To communicate the process by which we believe a charity creates change for animals, we use theory of change diagrams. It is important to note that these diagrams are not complete representations of real-world mechanisms of change. Rather, they are simplified models that ACE uses to represent our beliefs about mechanisms of change. For the sake of simplicity, some diagrams may not include relatively small or uncertain effects.
Below, we describe each of Wild Animal Initiative’s programs, listed in order of the financial resources devoted to them in 2020 (from highest to lowest). We list major accomplishments for each program, if a track record is available.
Wild Animal Initiative’s programs
This program focuses on producing original research in order to guide the organization’s work and catalyze academic conversations on wild animal welfare.
Main interventions
- Research
Key historical accomplishments
- Published two original research articles in peer-reviewed scientific journals: “What is the Value of Wild Animal Welfare for Restoration Ecology?” in Restoration Ecology,11 and “The Importance of Considering Age When Quantifying Wild Animals’ Welfare” in Biological Reviews12
- Submitted a public comment to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- Published 18 research notes and eight opinion articles on their website
This program focuses on supporting the professional needs of researchers focusing on wild animal welfare worldwide.
Main interventions
- Advocacy research
- Advice to researchers and funders
Key historical accomplishments
- Advised five academics on wild animal welfare projects
- Designed a field experiment with avian physiologists on pigeon contraception
- Launched a postdoctoral working group to identify ways to support early-career scientists
This program focuses on engaging researchers worldwide via presentations, panel discussions, and meetings to work on wild animal welfare.
Main interventions
- Outreach to academics
- Advocacy research
Key historical accomplishments
- Established new relationships with about 80 researchers
- Expanded Wild Animal Initiative’s academic advisory panel to six members
This program focuses on building alliances with organizations and individuals who support wild animal welfare worldwide.
Main interventions
- Alliance building
- Events (e.g., meetings, webinars)
Key historical accomplishments
- Co-organized the third Wild Animal Welfare Summit (2020), a webinar and open forum
- Hosted one event with two other organizations working on wild animal welfare
This program focuses on providing funding for academic research on wild animal welfare.
Main interventions
- Funding for academic research
Key historical accomplishments
- Announced a research fund and launched the first call for proposals
Research for intervention effectiveness
Supporting and/or conducting animal advocacy research
We believe that conducting advocacy research is a generally promising intervention, especially when considering its potential effects in the longer term (defined as more than one year). Due to the lack of research about the extent to which animal advocacy research results are actually used by the movement to prioritize and implement their work, our confidence in the short-term effects of this intervention is low. Also, we acknowledge that we may be generally biased to favor this intervention because part of our work consists of conducting and supporting relevant research—see our assessment of the effects of producing advocacy research.
Movement building
There is currently no empirical evidence that reviews the effectiveness of movement building in animal advocacy. However, we believe that capacity-building projects have the potential to help animals indirectly by increasing the effectiveness of other projects and organizations. Furthermore, building alliances with key influencers, institutions, or social movements could expand the audience and impact of animal advocacy organizations and projects, leading to net positive outcomes for animals. Additionally, ACE’s 2018 research and Harris13 suggest that capacity building and building alliances are currently neglected relative to other interventions aimed at influencing public opinion and industry.
Our Assessment
We think that Wild Animal Initiative’s internal research and outreach programs—both of which aim to strengthen the animal advocacy movement—are particularly effective, especially because they focus on wild animals, though we acknowledge that there is little available evidence to support this claim. Despite the lack of a track record for their grantmaking program, we think it may also contribute to the growth of the field.
We believe that Wild Animal Initiative’s programs have the potential to influence priorities, inform the implementation of interventions, and importantly, build the field of wild animal welfare in academia.
Overall, we think that all of Wild Animal Initiative’s spending on programs primarily goes toward strengthening the animal advocacy movement and helping wild animals, both of which we think are high-priority outcomes.
Room for More Funding
A new recommendation from ACE could lead to a large increase in a charity’s funding. In this criterion, we investigate whether a charity is able to absorb and effectively utilize funding that the recommendation may bring in or, if the charity has a prior recommendation status, whether they will continue to effectively absorb funding that comes from our recommendation.
Method
In the following section, we inspect the charity’s plans for expansion as well as their financials, including revenue and expenditure projections.
The charities we evaluate typically receive revenue from a variety of different sources, such as individual donations or grants from foundations.14 In order to guarantee that a charity will raise the funds needed for their operations, they should be able to predict changes in future revenue. To estimate charities’ room for more funding, we request records of their revenue since 2019 and ask that they predict their revenue for 2021–2023. A review of the literature on nonprofit finance suggests that revenue diversity may be positively associated with revenue predictability if the sources of income are largely uncorrelated.15 However, a few sources of large donations—if stable and reliable—may also be associated with high performance and growth. Therefore, in this criterion, we also indicate the charities’ major sources of income.
We present the charities’ reported plans for expansion of each program as well as other planned changes for the next two years. We do not make active suggestions for additional plans. However, we ask charities to indicate how they would spend additional funding that we expect would come in as a result of a new recommendation from ACE, considering that a Standout Charity status and a Top Charity status would likely lead to a $100,000 or $1,000,000 increase in funding, respectively. Note that we list the expenditures for planned non-program expenses but do not make any assessment of the charity’s overhead costs in this criterion, given that there is no evidence that the total share of overhead costs is negatively related to overall effectiveness.16 However, we do consider relative overhead costs per program in our Cost-Effectiveness criterion. Here we focus on evaluating whether additional resources are likely to be used for effective programs or other beneficial changes in the organization. The latter may include investments into infrastructure and efforts to retain staff, both of which we think are important for sustainable growth.
It is common practice for charities to hold more funds than needed for their current expenses (i.e., reserves) in order to be able to withstand changes in the business cycle or other external shocks that may affect their incoming revenue. Such additional funds can also serve as investments into future projects in the long run. Thus, it can be effective to provide a charity with additional funds to secure the stability of the organization or provide funding for larger, future projects. We do not prescribe a certain share of reserves, but we suggest that charities hold reserves equal to at least one year of expenditures, and we increase a charity’s room for more funding if their reserves in 2021 are less than 100% of their total expenditure.
Finally, we aggregate the financial information and the charity’s plans to form an assessment of their room for more funding. All descriptive data and estimations can be found in this sheet. Our assessment of a charity’s ability to effectively absorb additional funding helps inform our recommendation decision.
Information and Analysis
The chart below shows Wild Animal Initiative’s revenues, expenditures, and net assets from 2019–2020, as well as projections for the years 2021–2023. The information is based on the charity’s past financial data and their own predictions for the years 2021–2023.
Wild Animal Initiative receives all of their income from donations.17 In 2020, they received 39% of their funding from donations larger than 20% of their annual revenue, which increased to 81.8% in 2021 when Wild Animal Initiative received a grant of $3.5 million. This grant is restricted to Wild Animal Initiative’s grantmaking program.
Wild Animal Initiative has also received funding influenced by ACE as a result of their prior recommended charity status for the past year. As such, their room for more funding analysis will focus on our assessment of whether they will continue to effectively absorb funding that comes from our recommendation.
According to Wild Animal Initiative’s reported projections, their estimated increase in revenue in 2022 will not cover their plans for expansion. Subtracting their projected annual revenue from their projected annual expenditures, we find a funding gap of about $1,510,000 in 2022 and about $1,685,000 in 2023.18 We estimate that Wild Animal Initiative has received $262,000 in 2020 as a result of their prior recommended charity status;19 should Wild Animal Initiative lose their recommended charity status, their projected revenue may be lowered, resulting in more room for funding.
With more than 100% of their current annual expenditures held in net assets—as projected by Wild Animal Initiative for 2021—we believe that they hold a sufficient amount of reserves.
Below we list Wild Animal Initiative’s plans for expansion for each of their programs as well as other planned expenditures, such as administrative costs, wages, and training. We do not verify the feasibility of the plans or the specifics of how changes in expenditure will cover planned expansions. Reported changes in expenditure are based on Wild Animal Initiative’s own estimates of changes in program expenditures for 2021–2022 and 2022–2023.
Wild Animal Initiative plans to expand their internal research, researcher services, outreach, coalition strategy, and grantmaking programs. In addition, they are considering starting or supporting a project on public policy and wild animals. More details can be found in the estimation sheet and the supplementary materials.
- Add field growth monitoring
- Expand priorities research
- Hire 12 Research Specialists, five Research Leads to manage teams on specific topics of expertise, and a Research Project Manager
Reported change in expenditure
- 2022: $56,000 to $331,000
- 2023: $5,000 to $280,000
- Add open access resources, skills training, and student programs
- Expand career advising
- Hire a Career Advisor, a Director of Research Services, a Fellowship Administrator, a Humane Methods Researcher, and a Humane Methods Instructor
Reported change in expenditure
- 2022: $84,000 to $236,000
- 2023: $4,000 to $152,000
Planned expansions and other changes
- Add an annual conference, seminar series, and course materials
- Expand the contact directory to facilitate networking
- Hire an Events Coordinator, a Director of Communications, a Social Media Specialist, a Program Communications Specialist, a Public Relations Specialist, an Events Assistant, a Communications Manager, a Content Specialist, and a Summer Programs Manager
Reported change in expenditure
- 2022: $82,000 to $267,000
- 2023: $5,000 to $170,000
Planned expansions and other changes
- Potentially launch new organizations
- Expand coalition work
- Hire an Advocacy Director and a Movement Growth Researcher
Reported change in expenditure
- 2022: $23,000 to $89,000
- 2023: $4,000 to $83,000
- Fund 6–20 PhD and postdoctoral positions
- Expand a quarterly funding round and support 1–5 projects per round
- Hire a Grants and Fellowships Manager and a Grants Administrator
Reported change in expenditure20
- 2022: $1,601,000
- 2023: $76,000
- Potentially launch, incubate, or support another group in starting a public policy program. Potential projects include legal research and campaigning for specific laws and litigation to hold federal agencies accountable. Wild Animal Initiative has identified 3–4 potential positions for each project.
Reported change in expenditure
- 2022: -$3,468,000 to $19,000
- 2023: -$2,014,000 to -$1,771,000
Our Assessment
Wild Animal Initiative plans to focus future expansions on their internal research, researcher services, outreach, coalition strategy, and grantmaking programs. For donors influenced by ACE wishing to donate to Wild Animal Initiative, we estimate that the organization can continue to effectively absorb funding that we expect to come with a recommendation status.
Based on (i) Wild Animal Initiative’s own projections that their revenue will/will not cover their expenditures, (ii) our assessment that they have sufficient reserves, and (iii) our assumption that a loss of recommendation status would result in a decrease in funding, we believe that overall, Wild Animal Initiative continues to have room for $1,772,000 of additional funding in 2022 and $1,685,000 in 2023. See our Programs criterion for our assessment of the effectiveness of their programs.
It is possible that a charity could run out of room for funding more quickly than we expect, or that they could come up with good ways to use funding beyond what we expect. If a charity receives a recommendation as Top Charity, we check in mid-year about the funding they’ve received since the release of our recommendations, and we use the estimates presented above to indicate whether we still expect them to be able to effectively absorb additional funding at that time.
Cost Effectiveness
Method
A charity’s recent cost effectiveness provides an insight into how well it has made use of its available resources and is a useful component in understanding how cost effective future donations to the charity might be. In this criterion, we take a more in-depth look at the charity’s use of resources over the past 18 months and compare that to the outputs they have achieved in each of their main programs during that time. We seek to understand whether each charity has been successful at implementing their programs in the recent past and whether past successes were achieved at a reasonable cost. We only complete an assessment of cost effectiveness for programs that started in 2019 or earlier and that have expenditures totaling at least 10% of the organization’s annual budget.
Below, we report what we believe to be the key outputs of each program (for a complete list of outputs reported by Wild Animal Initiative, see this document), as well as the total program expenditures. To estimate total program expenditures, we take the reported expenditures for each program and add a portion of their non-program expenditures weighted by the size of the program. This allows us to incorporate general organizational running costs into our consideration of cost effectiveness.
We spend a significant portion of our time during the evaluation process verifying the outputs charities report to us. We do this by (i) searching for independent sources that can help us verify claims, and (ii) directing follow-up questions to charities to gather more information. We adjusted some of the reported claims based on our verification work.
Information and Analysis
Overview of expenditures
The following chart shows Wild Animal Initiative’s total program expenditures from January 2020 – June 2021.
Key outputs, January 2020 – June 2021:
- Published two original research studies in peer-reviewed journals
- Submitted a public comment to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- Authored and published 14 research notes and three opinion articles on their website
Expenditures21 (USD), January 2020 – June 2021: $372,000
Wild Animal Initiative’s internal research program is focused on producing original research related to wild animal welfare. The program has individual outcomes (i.e. research outputs), so as a measure of cost effectiveness, we can estimate the average cost of each outcome—i.e., each of their research outputs over the past 18 months cost them about $18,600 each. This is a somewhat simplistic quantification of cost effectiveness as it doesn’t take other factors into account—e.g., the quality of the research outputs, the likelihood that the research will be used, the potential focus that research summaries and blog posts would have if they were used, etc. That said, all their research is focused on wild animal welfare, which we believe to be a high-priority cause area.
Key outputs, January 2020 – June 2021:
- Provided advice to researchers working on projects focused on wild animals
- Helped researchers craft grant proposals and helped a researcher crowdfund for a project
- Launched a postdoctoral working group, with three Ph.D. students and one postdoctoral researcher, focused on providing guidance to recent postdoctorates in wild animal welfare research
Expenditures22 (USD), January 2020 – June 2021: $155,000
Wild Animal Initiative’s researcher services program focuses on supporting the professional needs of wild animal welfare researchers in order to develop, fund, and grow wild animal welfare as an interdisciplinary field. We think that motivating and providing support for academics to conduct research in this area may be particularly cost effective, as academics have access to resources to scale up this growing field.
Key outputs, January 2020 – June 2021:
- Established relationships with 44 researchers through meetings, knowledge-exchange, and advice-sharing
- Expanded their academic advisory panel to six members
Expenditures (USD), January 2020 – June 2021: $119,000
Wild Animal Initiative’s outreach program focuses on engaging academics to increase interest in wild animal welfare research. We think that motivating academics to conduct research in this area may be particularly cost effective, as academics have access to resources to scale up this growing field.
Key outputs, January 2020 – June 2021:
- Organized and facilitated a meeting with two leading organizations working on wild animal welfare research in which all groups present agreed to take a coordinated approach toward the growth of the field
- Hosted a webinar for effective altruism group leaders on best practices in communication of wild animal welfare concepts
- Collaborated with and influenced an effective altruism research organization to take on at least three research project ideas
Expenditures (USD), January 2020 – June 2021: $36,000
Wild Animal Initiative’s coalition strategy program focuses on coordinating the actions of other nonprofits and individuals conducting or considering research relevant to wild animal welfare. As so few resources have gone into the program, we are particularly uncertain about its cost effectiveness and thus have not included any further assessment.
- Announced the research fund on Terra Viva Grants Directory (an online service for managing information about grants for agriculture, energy, the environment, and natural resources) and their first call for proposals related to the welfare and ecology of juvenile wild animals
- Partially funded ecotoxicology research to investigate the relationships between mercury poisoning of magnificent frigatebird (Fregata magnificens) chicks, parental behavior, and viral infections in juveniles
Expenditures (USD), January 2020 – June 2021: $6,000
Wild Animal Initiative’s grantmaking program provides funding for academic research on high-priority questions in wild animal welfare. The aim of the program is to advance understanding of fundamental concepts, methods, and preliminary interventions in order to accelerate the field of wild animal welfare, encourage further research on high-priority questions, and empower researchers to explore topics neglected by other funders. This program was launched in 2021. Given the newness of the program and the few resources that have gone into it, we are particularly uncertain about its cost effectiveness and thus have not included any further assessment.
Our Assessment
The majority of Wild Animal Initiative’s programs have impacts that are indirect and may happen in the future. As such, it is relatively difficult to assess the cost effectiveness of these programs using our methods. Given the outputs achieved using the stated expenditures per program, we do not have concerns about the cost effectiveness of Wild Animal Initiative’s programs.
Leadership and Culture
A charity that performs well on this criterion has strong leadership and a healthy organizational culture. The way an organization is led affects its organizational culture, which in turn impacts the organization’s effectiveness and stability.24 The key aspects that ACE considers when examining leadership and culture are reviewed in detail below.
Method
We review aspects of organizational leadership and culture by capturing staff and volunteer perspectives via our culture survey, in addition to information provided by top leadership staff (as defined by each charity).
Assessing leadership
First, we consider key information about the composition of leadership staff and board of directors. There appears to be no consensus in the literature on the specifics of the relationship between board composition and organizational performance,25 therefore we refrain from making judgements on board composition. However, because donors may have preferences on whether the Executive Director (ED) or other top executive staff are board members or not, we note when this is the case. According to the Council on Foundations,26 risks of EDs serving as board members include conflicts of interest when the board sets the ED’s salary, complicated reporting relationships, and blurred lines between governing bodies and staff. On the other hand, an ED that is part of a governing board can provide context about day-to-day operations and ultimately lead to better-informed decisions, while also giving the ED more credibility and authority.
We also consider information about leadership’s commitment to transparency by looking at available information on the charity’s website, such as key staff members, financial information, and board meeting notes. We require organizations selected for evaluation to be transparent with ACE throughout the process. Although we value transparency, we do not expect all organizations to be transparent with the public about sensitive information. For example, we recognize that organizations and individuals working in some regions or on some interventions could be harmed by making information about their work public. In these cases, we favor confidentiality over transparency.
In addition, we utilize our culture survey to ask staff to identify the extent to which they feel that leadership is competently guiding the organization.
Organizational policies
We ask organizations undergoing evaluation to provide a list of their human resources policies, and we elicit the views of staff and volunteers through our culture survey. Administering ACE’s culture survey to all staff members, as well as volunteers working at least 20 hours per month, is an eligibility requirement to be recommended as an ACE Top or Standout Charity. However, ACE does not require individual staff members or volunteers at participating charities to complete the survey. We recognize that surveying staff and volunteers could (i) lead to inaccuracies due to selection bias, and (ii) may not reflect employees’ true opinions as they are aware that their responses could influence ACE’s evaluation of their employer. In our experience, it is easier to uncover issues with an organization’s culture than it is to assess how strong an organization’s culture is. Therefore, we focus on determining whether there are issues in the organization’s culture that have a negative impact on staff productivity and well-being.
We assume that employees in the nonprofit sector have incentives that are material, purposive, and solidary.27 Since nonprofit sector wages are typically below for-profit wages, our survey elicits wage satisfaction from all staff. We also ask organizations to provide volunteer hours, because due to the absence of a contract and pay, volunteering may be a special case of uncertain work conditions. Additionally, we request the organization’s benefit policies regarding time off, health care, and training and professional development. As policies vary across countries and cultures, we do not evaluate charities based on their set of policies and do not expect effective charities to have all policies in place.
To capture whether the organization also provides non-material incentives, e.g., goal-related intangible rewards, we elicit employee engagement using the Gallup Q12 survey. We consider an average engagement score below the median value (i.e., below four) of the scale a potential concern.
ACE believes that the animal advocacy movement should be safe and inclusive for everyone. Therefore, we also collect information about policies and activities regarding representation/diversity, equity, and inclusion (R/DEI). We use the terms “representation” and “diversity” broadly in this section to refer to the diversity of certain social identity characteristics (called “protected classes” in some countries).28 Additionally, we believe that effective charities must have human resources policies against harassment29 and discrimination,30 and that cases of harrassment and discrimination in the workplace should be addressed appropriately. If a specific case of harassment or discrimination from the last 12 months is reported to ACE by several current or former staff members or volunteers at a charity, and said case remains unaddressed, the charity in question is ineligible to receive a recommendation from ACE.
Information and Analysis
Leadership staff
In this section, we list each charity’s President (or equivalent) and/or Executive Director (or equivalent), and we describe the board of directors. This is completed for the purpose of transparency and to identify the relationship between the ED and board of directors.
- Executive Director (ED): Michelle Graham, involved in the organization for two years
- Number of members on board of directors: five members31
Wild Animal Initiative did not have a transition in leadership in the last year.
All of the staff respondents to our culture survey agreed that Wild Animal Initiative’s leadership team guides the organization competently.
Wild Animal Initiative has been transparent with ACE during the evaluation process. In addition, Wild Animal Initiative’s audited financial documents are available on their website or GuideStar. Lists of board members and key staff members are available on the Wild Animal Initiative’s website. In addition, board meeting notes are available on Wild Animal Initiative’s website.
Culture
At the time of distributing the culture survey, Wild Animal Initiative had six staff members (including full-time, part-time, and contractors), and no volunteers. Four staff members responded to our survey, yielding a response rate of 67%.32 One out of 6 team members were identified as members of leadership—which could have skewed the results of our survey.
Wild Animal Initiative has a formal compensation plan to determine staff salaries. None of the staff that responded to our survey report that they are at least somewhat dissatisfied with their wage. Wild Animal Initiative offers 32 days of paid time off per year, 50 sick days and personal leave, and full healthcare coverage. About 25% of staff report that they are at least somewhat dissatisfied with the benefits provided. Additional policies are listed in the table below.
General compensation policies
Has policy | Partial / informal policy | No policy |
A formal compensation policy to determine staff salaries | |
Paid time off
Wild Animal Initiative offers 12 days of paid flexible holidays and 20 days of paid vacation |
|
Sick days and personal leave
Wild Animal Initiative offers 10 days of paid sick/safe leave (available for employees who are ill, victimized, or have human or nonhuman family members in these circumstances), 10 days of bereavement leave, and 30 days of family or medical leave (with an additional six weeks of unpaid leave available). Part-time employees are eligible for leave proportionate to the amount of time they work. |
|
Healthcare coverage
Full-time employees can choose between four comprehensive healthcare plans, two vision plans, and one dental plan. Wild Animal Initiative contributes 100% to the employee’s premium for the medical and dental plans. |
|
Paid family and medical leave | |
Clearly defined essential functions for all positions, preferably with written job descriptions | |
Annual (or more frequent) performance evaluations | |
Formal onboarding or orientation process | |
Funding for training and development consistently available to each employee | |
Simple and transparent written procedure for employees to request further training or support | |
Flexible work hours | |
Remote work option | |
Internal communications Standard Operating Procedure (SOP), which supports collaboration, deep work, and work-life balance in their remote workplace | |
Collaboration Policy | |
Paid internships (if possible and applicable) |
The average score in our engagement survey is 6.5 (on a 1–7 scale), suggesting that on average, staff do not exhibit a low engagement score. Wild Animal Initiative has staff policies against harassment and discrimination. None of the staff report that they have experienced or witnessed harassment or discrimination at their workplace during the last twelve months. See all other related policies in the table below.
Policies related to representation/diversity, equity, and inclusion (R/DEI)
Has policy | Partial / informal policy | No policy |
A clearly written workplace code of ethics/conduct | |
A written statement that the organization does not tolerate discrimination on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, disability status, or other characteristics | |
A simple and transparent written procedure for filing complaints | |
Mandatory reporting of harassment and discrimination through all levels, up to and including the board of directors | |
Explicit protocols for addressing concerns or allegations of harassment or discrimination | |
Documentation of all reported instances of harassment or discrimination, along with the outcomes of each case | |
Regular trainings on topics such as harassment and discrimination in the workplace | |
An anti-retaliation policy protecting whistleblowers and those who report grievances |
Our Assessment
We did not detect any major concerns in Wild Animal Initiative’s leadership and organizational culture. We positively noted that Wild Animal Initiative’s staff generally agree that leadership guides the organization competently, that team members do not experience harassment or discrimination in the workplace, and that team members seem engaged and satisfied with their jobs.
On average, our team considers advocating for welfare improvements to be a positive and promising approach. However, there are different viewpoints within ACE’s research team on the effect of advocating for animal welfare standards on the spread of anti-speciesist values. There are concerns that arguing for welfare improvements may lead to complacency related to animal welfare and give the public an inconsistent message—e.g., see Wrenn (2012). In addition, there are concerns with the alliance between nonprofit organizations and the companies that are directly responsible for animal exploitation, as explored in Baur and Schmitz (2012).
The weightings used for calculating these country scores are scale (25%), tractability (55%), and regional influence (20%).
We don’t believe that the number of individuals is the only relevant characteristic for scale, and we don’t necessarily believe that groups of animals should be prioritized solely based on the scale of the problem. However, number of animals is one characteristic we use for prioritization.
We estimate there are 10 quintillion, or 1019, wild animals alive at any time, of whom we estimate at least 10 trillion are vertebrates. It’s notable that Rowe (2020) estimates that 100 trillion to 10 quadrillion (or 1014 to 1016) wild invertebrates are killed by agricultural pesticides annually.
Farmed invertebrates include, among other groups, honey bee workers (26.4 trillion used annually), cochineals (9.93 trillion killed annually), caterpillars used for silk (636 billion killed annually) Rowe (2020)
For a discussion on invertebrate sentience, see for example Waldhorn et al. (2019).
For arguments supporting the view that the most important consideration of our present actions should be their impact in the long term, see Greaves & MacAskill (2019) and Beckstead (2019).
To be selected for evaluation, we require that a charity has a revenue of at least about $50,000 and faces no country-specific regulatory barriers to receiving money from ACE.
Based on the numbers that Wild Animal Initiative provided for 2020.
Wild Animal Initiative also received two ACE Movement Grants prior to being awarded recommended charity status: $60,000 in November 2019 and $30,000 in July 2020.
Wild Animal Initiative received a grant for $3.5 million restricted to this grant program. As a result, they may have less room for funding related to this program.
To estimate their expenditures, we took their reported expenditures for this program and added a portion of their general non-program expenditures weighted by the size of this program compared to their other programs. This allowed us to incorporate their general organizational running costs into our consideration of their cost effectiveness.
To estimate their expenditures, we took their reported expenditures for this program and added a portion of their general non-program expenditures weighted by the size of this program compared to their other programs. This allowed us to incorporate their general organizational running costs into our consideration of their cost effectiveness.
Clark and Wilson (1961), as cited in Rollag (n.d.)
Examples of such social identity characteristics are: race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, gender or gender expression, sexual orientation, pregnancy or parental status, marital status, national origin, citizenship, amnesty, veteran status, political beliefs, age, ability, and genetic information.
Harassment can be non-sexual or sexual in nature: ACE defines non-sexual harassment as unwelcome conduct—including physical, verbal, and nonverbal behavior—that upsets, demeans, humiliates, intimidates, or threatens an individual or group. Harassment may occur in one incident or many. ACE defines sexual harassment as unwelcome sexual advances; requests for sexual favors; and other physical, verbal, and nonverbal behaviors of a sexual nature when (i) submission to such conduct is made explicitly or implicitly a term or condition of an individual’s employment; (ii) submission to or rejection of such conduct by an individual is used as the basis for employment decisions affecting the targeted individual; or (iii) such conduct has the purpose or effect of interfering with an individual’s work performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment.
ACE defines discrimination as the unjust or prejudicial treatment of or hostility toward an individual on the basis of certain characteristics (called “protected classes” in some countries), such as race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, gender or gender expression, sexual orientation, pregnancy or parental status, marital status, national origin, citizenship, amnesty, veteran status, political beliefs, age, ability, or genetic information.
As of June 30, 2021, Wild Animal Initiative had six board members. At the time of publishing the review, Wild Animal Initiative had five.
Because of an issue with this year’s culture survey, some charities had to share the culture survey twice with their staff, and only the second culture survey was registered. Wild Animal Initiative informed us that one of their staff members had voluntarily shared that they responded to the first survey but not the second and therefore, this person’s culture survey response is not included in this response rate.