Open Philanthropy Project

OVERVIEW: The Open Philanthropy Project represents a partnership that was formed between Good Ventures and GiveWell in 2014. The project’s four focus areas are Global Health and Development, U.S. Policy, Global Catastrophic Risks and Scientific Research.

IP TAKE: The Open Philanthropy Project’s largest area of giving is health, with grants supporting global health initiatives, disease research and biosecurity, and pandemic preparedness. This funder also supports a broad range of domestic issues in the U.S., including policy reform in the areas of criminal justice, land use, immigration and animal welfare. 

Open Philanthropy tends to prioritize collaborative projects and organizations that are willing to share data and results broadly via publications and reports. Its grantees include leading research universities and institutes and well-established nonprofits that use evidenced-based interventions to effect broad change. While this funder is not accessible and does not run an open application process, it invites prospective grantees to reach out via email. It’s responsive and reasonably approachable, though bureaucratic.

PROFILE: Originally established as partnership between Good Ventures and the charity evaluator GiveWell, the Open Philanthropy Project adopted its name in 2014 and officially became an independent limited liability company in 2017. It is mainly funded by Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and his wife, Cari Tuna. The project’s mission is “to give as effectively as we can and share our findings openly so that anyone can build on our work.” It names two main areas of grantmaking focus: Global Health and Development and Longtermism.

Grants for Global Development 

Open Philanthropy conducts global development grantmaking through its Global Health and Development and Global Aid Policy focus areas. The health and development initiative has recently funded several large organizations that aim to eliminate hunger and poverty, improve safety and develop just economic policy around the world. Grantmaking in these areas relies heavily on quantitative data and evidence-based interventions that have the potential to effect large-scale change. The project has supported hunger initiatives including Food Fortification and the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition, as well as Living Goods, an organization that works with governments to distribute health supplies and safety equipment to underserved populations in Kenya, Uganda and Myanmar. Other grantees include Developmental Media International, an LLC that produces media campaigns and communication systems that aim to “change behaviors and improve lives,” and the Center for Global Development, a U.S.-based think tank that conducts research and develops policy “to make the world a more prosperous, just and safe place for us all.” 

Global development funding also stems from Open Philanthropy’s Global Aid Policy focus area, which was created in April 2022 and supports establishing new global health programs, aid policy and advocacy development strategies, increasing the effectiveness of existing aid programs, and working to reduce debt burdens.

The project has funded Malaria No More, giving $3.4 million to their "malaria diplomacy" efforts, Center for Global Development (CGD), which received $100,000 for an internal effectiveness review, and International Rescue Committee (IRC), which was given $1.2 million to place a senior staffer at USAID.

Grants for Global Health

The Open Philanthropy Project’s Global Health and Development funding area has focused on programs that improve the awareness, prevention and treatment of preventable diseases and conditions in developing nations around the world. A significant number of grants support initiatives for children’s health. Other areas of interest include malaria, schistosomiasis and the prevention of iodine deficiency. Recent grantees include the Malaria Consortium, Sightsavers’ Deworming Programs, Helen Keller International, the Iodine Global Network, Project Healthy Children and the END Fund. In 2020, Open Philanthropy responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with a $400,000 grant to the Center for Global Development for research on the effect that COVID-19 has had on mortality and health “due to suspended health services, malnutrition, and reduced economic activity.” 

Grants for Immigrants and Refugees

The Open Philanthropy Project’s U.S. Policy initiative names immigration policy as a main area of interest. Grants support the development of U.S. policy to “allow more people to be able to move internationally, particularly from lower-income to higher-income countries.” One grantee, Protect the People, helps seasonal workers from Haiti attain H-2A work visas for the U.S. Open Philanthropy has also supported research on immigration policy at the Niskanen Center and the Center for Global Development and provided operation support to the New York City-based International Refugee Assistance Project. 

Grants for Criminal Justice Reform

Open Philanthropy’s criminal justice reform program became an independent organization under the name Just Impact in November 2021. Previously, it supported initiatives that aim to reduce the rate of incarceration in the U.S., as well as restorative justice and community safety programs. In Los Angeles, the project supported the Re-Imagine L.A. County’s campaign to support Measure J, a charter that would increase public funding for community, mental health, restorative justice and anti-recidivism programs. Another grantee, the national organization We Got Us, supports the children of incarcerated parents. Other criminal justice grantees include New Jersey’s Newark Community Street Team, the BlackRoots Alliance Prosecutor Accountability Program, the Black Strategy Fund and the restorative justice program In My Words. 

Grants for Science Research 

The Open Philanthropy Project’s Scientific Research program seeks to “identify scientific research that has the potential for high impact and is under supported by other funders.” While a significant portion of the program’s funding goes to biomedical research, other areas of interest include scientific innovation, transformative basic science and scientific policy and infrastructure. The innovation sub-initiative focuses on the development of new tools and techniques used in research, including the development of microscopy, imaging and protein reading methods and devices. Transformative basic science funding focuses on underfunded research that has the potential for high impact and policy and infrastructure funding aims to improve the ways in which governments and other relevant organizations fund, regulate and share research and data. Recent grantees include Charles Gersbach, who develops epigenome editing tools at Duke University, and Ed Boyden, who received funding for his work in expansion microscopy at MIT. Other institutions and organizations that have received recent grants include Sherlock Biosciences, the University of Michigan, Kyoto University, protocols.io and Rockefeller University. 

Grants for Disease Research 

Open Philanthropy’s disease research funding stems mainly from its Human Health and Wellbeing and Biosecurity and Pandemic Preparedness sub-programs. Grantmaking sourced from the human health program supports “tractable and cost-effective research on the world’s most burdensome diseases” and has prioritized heart disease, cancers and malaria in recent years. Grants have gone to researchers at the University of California at Davis, Stanford University, Yale University and the CDC Foundation. 

The biosecurity sub-program focuses on prevention and preparedness for natural and manmade pandemics. Prior to the COVID-19 crisis, the project had supported research, conferences and symposia at the University of Sydney, Oxford University, Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and Georgetown University’s Center for Global Health Science and Security. Since the 2019 crisis, the program’s focus has shifted to COVID-19 research and response. The University of Colorado received a grant to conduct experiments on the effectiveness of personal protective equipment and the Center for Global Development received support for the development of local response guidelines. Columbia University’s Brown Institute for Media Innovation also received funding to develop public information systems to limit further spread of the disease. Grant recipients that have conducted research on COVID-19 treatments and vaccinations include Stanford University, Duke University, the Soroka Medical Center in Israel, the University of Michigan, the University of California at Davis and the drug company Riboscience. 

Grants for Animals and Wildlife 

Through its U.S. Policy funding initiative, Open Philanthropy supports organizations involved in developing awareness and changing policy surrounding issues of farm animal welfare. Although funding stems from the U.S. Policy program, organizations in other countries have received support, including the U.K.’s Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the Eurogroup for Animals and the Brazil-based Sinergia Animal, which “works to end the worst practices of industrial animal agriculture.” In the U.S., Open Philanthropy has supported a fish welfare program at New York University and We Animals Media, which aims to document the widespread unethical treatment of farm animals and raise awareness of their plight. Other recent grantees of this sub-program include World Animal Net, VegeProject, Dharma Voices for Animals, Animal Advocacy Careers and CAF America. 

Grants for Housing, Homelessness and Community Development

Open Philanthropy’s U.S. Policy program names land use reform as an area of interest and has supported policy development for affordable housing in and near large metropolitan areas, where limits on housing density often work to maintain high housing prices. The initiative has so far focused on areas near New York City, Boston, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington D.C. Recent grantees include California YIMBY, Smart Growth America, the Sightline Institute and Harborlight Community Partners.

 Important Grant Details:

The Open Philanthropy Project makes over $50 million in grants yearly. Grants generally range from $25,000 to $500,000 but have been as large as $2 million in some instances. The project’s average grant size is about $100,000. Grantees include leading research universities and institutes in the U.S. and abroad and large, well-established nonprofits in Open Philanthropy’s areas of interest. Open Philanthropy prefers to support organizations and projects that are willing to share their findings and results broadly through publications and reports. This funder maintains a searchable database of past grantees

This funder does not run an open application process but invites prospective grantees to share information about their organizations and projects with Open Philanthropy staff via email or social media.

PEOPLE:

Search for staff contact info and bios in People Finder (paid subscribers only).

LINKS: