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Volume 32, Issue 3: June, 2005
Abstract
Collective Actors and Corporate Targets in Tobacco
Control: A Cross-National Comparison
Constance A. Nathanson, PhD
Cross-national comparative analysis of tobacco control strategies
can alert health advocates to how opportunities for public
health action, types of action, and probabilities for success
are shaped by political systems and cultures. This article
is based on case studies of tobacco control in the United
States, Canada, Britain, and France. Two questions are addressed:
(a) To whom were the dangers of smoking attributed? and (b)
What was the role of collective action—grassroots level
organization—in combating these dangers? Activists in
Canada, Britain, and France moved earlier than the United
States did to target the tobacco industry and the state. Locally
based advocacy centered on passive smoking has been far more
important in the United States. The author concludes that
U.S.-style advocacy has played a major role in this country’s
smoking decline but is insufficient in and of itself to change
the corporate practices of a wealthy and politically powerful
industry.
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