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Society Issues Health Tobacco Industry Critiques
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How the tobacco industry works: develops strategy, engineers product, promotes product, influences public perception, wields power in Congress and the courts.
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Research reviews the public statements made by the tobacco industry and private statements inside the industry, assesses the extent to which cigarette companies fulfilled their 1954 promises, and evaluates the effect on consumer knowledge of the product.
Interview with Dr. David Kessler.
Papers on Philip Morris's accommodation/pre-emption program; Philip Morris media plan for Colorado; RJR's field force; smoker's groups bankrolled by the tobacco industry.
From Action on Smoking and Health in the UK. Covers emissions, smoker compensation, differences between expectations and reality for low tar cigarettes, and what the industry knew and how it behaved.
Interviews with advocates on industry activity in Canada, Hong Kong, Poland, and Thailand.
January/February issue of the magazine focuses on the tobacco industry.
Research paper reports on how the tobacco industry mobilized a well-coordinated attack on a national stop-smoking project.
A 1996 investigation of the controversial "60 Minutes" profile on the tobacco industry. Synopsis, interviews, and links.
Analysis of tobacco industry memos and internal documents reveals industry strategies to undermine tobacco prevention and push up cigarette sales in Cambodia, China, Hong Kong SAR, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand.
Gallery of cigarette ads and tobacco industry promotional items: t-shirts, caps, radios, and a wide variety of other items designed by tobacco companies to sell cigarettes, spit tobacco, and cigars.
Recent research identifies tobacco industry strategies to fight, delay, and water down health warnings, to prevent regulation of the tobacco industry, to circumvent advertising restrictions, and to give tobacco giant Philip Morris more lobbying power. (December 06, 2003)
Report on how the tobacco industry pressured other companies to scale back marketing of quit-smoking products. (August 14, 2002)
What's the biggest tobacco stock you've never heard of? Try Wal-Mart. Forbes article explains. (August 21, 2000)
World Health Organisation report says tobacco industry sabotaged WHO tobacco control efforts. (August 20, 2000)
"Philip Morris et al. are recasting themselves as kinder, gentler companies concerned about their communities. Meanwhile, they're strong-arming the TV networks to block counter-ads which might persuade you otherwise." (February 22, 2000)
Analysis of tobacco industry memos and internal documents reveals industry strategies to undermine tobacco prevention and push up cigarette sales in Cambodia, China, Hong Kong SAR, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand.
Research reviews the public statements made by the tobacco industry and private statements inside the industry, assesses the extent to which cigarette companies fulfilled their 1954 promises, and evaluates the effect on consumer knowledge of the product.
A 1996 investigation of the controversial "60 Minutes" profile on the tobacco industry. Synopsis, interviews, and links.
Papers on Philip Morris's accommodation/pre-emption program; Philip Morris media plan for Colorado; RJR's field force; smoker's groups bankrolled by the tobacco industry.
Research paper reports on how the tobacco industry mobilized a well-coordinated attack on a national stop-smoking project.
From Action on Smoking and Health in the UK. Covers emissions, smoker compensation, differences between expectations and reality for low tar cigarettes, and what the industry knew and how it behaved.
Interview with Dr. David Kessler.
Interviews with advocates on industry activity in Canada, Hong Kong, Poland, and Thailand.
Gallery of cigarette ads and tobacco industry promotional items: t-shirts, caps, radios, and a wide variety of other items designed by tobacco companies to sell cigarettes, spit tobacco, and cigars.
January/February issue of the magazine focuses on the tobacco industry.
Recent research identifies tobacco industry strategies to fight, delay, and water down health warnings, to prevent regulation of the tobacco industry, to circumvent advertising restrictions, and to give tobacco giant Philip Morris more lobbying power. (December 06, 2003)
Report on how the tobacco industry pressured other companies to scale back marketing of quit-smoking products. (August 14, 2002)
What's the biggest tobacco stock you've never heard of? Try Wal-Mart. Forbes article explains. (August 21, 2000)
World Health Organisation report says tobacco industry sabotaged WHO tobacco control efforts. (August 20, 2000)
"Philip Morris et al. are recasting themselves as kinder, gentler companies concerned about their communities. Meanwhile, they're strong-arming the TV networks to block counter-ads which might persuade you otherwise." (February 22, 2000)
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August 6, 2023 at 7:15:05 UTC
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