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TOBACCO: POLICING AND SOCIAL POLICY

Bernard Frank Kinman (General Secretary, the United Kingdom Alliance)
Professor Gerald Vinten (Member of Council, Royal Society of Health and Royal Society of Arts. Editor, Managerial Auditing Journal)

International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy

ISSN: 0144-333X

Article publication date: 1 April 1995

748

Abstract

Tobacco has exercised the interest of the nation since Elizabethan times, and the inhalation of its smoke for pleasure has become very widespread. It was not until the mid‐twentieth century, however, that its effects upon health were suspected. It is now widely accepted that tobacco smoke is implicated in a range of dangerous diseases, although the tobacco industry sometimes argues that the link is not proven. The arguments about the conflicting needs of a large, world‐wide industry and the health and prosperity of individuals and society are complex, and often influenced by conflicting vested interests. Government's involvement in the issues is further complicated by its reliance upon large tobacco revenues. The link between advertising and increased smoking, either by existing or new smokers, is not proved by research, although there are strong indications that it exists. The behaviour of most parties involved, including the tobacco companies, indicates that they share the belief of a link. Voluntary controls upon tobacco advertising have had some effect, in that, for example, advertising in the U.K. is no longer overtly directed at children, but various anti‐smoking lobbies believe voluntary control to be ineffective. The present British government has toyed wth the possibility of statutory control, but faces stiff opposition from back‐benchers and within the cabinet; it is also probably philosophically opposed to such measures. More research is needed into the link between advertising and smoking behaviour.

Citation

Kinman, B.F. and Vinten, G. (1995), "TOBACCO: POLICING AND SOCIAL POLICY", International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, Vol. 15 No. 4/5, pp. 59-112. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb013212

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1995, MCB UP Limited

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