Article Text
Abstract
Over the past few decades, “Big Tobacco” has spread its tentacles across the developing world with devastating results. The global incidence of smoking has increased exponentially in Africa, Asia and South America and it is leading to an equally rapid increase in the incidence of smoking-induced morbidity and mortality on these continents. The World Health Organization (WHO) has tried to respond to this crisis by devising a set of regulations to limit the spread of smoking, and many countries have bound themselves to follow the WHO’s guidelines. This article provides an overview of these regulatory measures and the authors attempt to defend them from the perspective of liberty and autonomy. Their motivation is to countermand any attempt by the tobacco industry to attack the regulations on the grounds that they infringe the liberty rights of producers and consumers. It is also argued, however, that a blanket ban of the production, sale and consumption of tobacco cannot be justified on the grounds of autonomy alone.
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
Provenance and Peer review: not commissioned; externally peer reviewed
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Tobacco control in Nepal during a time of government turmoil (1960–2006)
- “Accommodating” smoke-free policies: tobacco industry’s Courtesy of Choice programme in Latin America
- The importance of continued engagement during the implementation phase of tobacco control policies in a middle-income country: the case of Costa Rica
- Implementation of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in mainland China
- Ethical and legal aspects of global tobacco control
- Impact of the WHO FCTC on tobacco control: perspectives from stakeholders in 12 countries
- Worldwide news and comment
- The human rights responsibilities of multinational tobacco companies
- The economics of tobacco: myths and realities
- Injecting greater urgency into global tobacco control