Start here:
- The long-term future (Jess Whittlestone, 2017)
 - Existential risk prevention as global priority (Nick Bostrom, 2012)
 - The vulnerable world hypothesis (Nick Bostrom, 2018)
 - Are we living at the most influential time in history? (Will MacAskill, 2019)
 - The Precipice (Toby Ord, 2020)
 
Further reading:
- The future of humanity (Nick Bostrom, 2007)
 - Astronomical waste (Nick Bostrom, 2003)
 - A proposed adjustment to the astronomical waste argument (Nick Beckstead, 2013)
 - On the overwhelming importance of shaping the far future (Nick Beckstead, 2013)
 - The expected value of extinction risk reduction is positive (Jan Brauner and Friederike Grosse-Holz, 2018)
 - The case for strong longtermism (Greaves and MacAskill, 2019)
 - Managing existential risk from emerging technologies (Nick Beckstead and Toby Ord, 2014)
 - Unprecedented technological risks (2014)
 - Probing the improbable: methodological challenges for risks with low probabilities and high stakes (Toby Ord, Rafaela Hillerbrand and Anders Sandberg, 2010)
 - The case for reducing extinction risk (Ben Todd, 2017)
 - Why might the future be good? (Paul Christiano)
 - Existential risk and existential hope (Owen Cotton-Barratt and Toby Ord, 2015)
 - The moral value of the far future (Karnofsky, 2014)
 - Differential intellectual progress as a positive-sum project (Tomasik, 2013)
 - If the future is big (Robin Hanson, 2018)
 

What about The Precipice?
Yes, good point. Added.
Maybe a few on s-risks, which are not only of concern for those with suffering-focused views? These might be good places to start:
https://longtermrisk.org/risks-of-astronomical-future-suffering/
https://longtermrisk.org/reducing-risks-of-astronomical-suffering-a-neglected-priority/
https://longtermrisk.org/altruists-should-prioritize-artificial-intelligence/