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The perimetric boycott: A tool for tobacco control advocacy
Naphtali Offen, University of California, San Francisco
Elizabeth A. Smith, University of California, San Francisco
Ruth E. Malone, University of California, San Francisco

This postprint is also in the postprint series of the following research unit(s):

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ABSTRACT:

Objectives: To propose criteria to help advocates: (1) determine when tobacco related boycotts may be useful; (2) select appropriate targets; and (3) predict and measure boycott success.

Methods: Analysis of tobacco focused boycotts retrieved from internal tobacco industry documents websites and other scholarship on boycotts.

Results: Tobacco related boycotts may be characterised by boycott target and reason undertaken. Most boycotts targeted the industry itself and were called for political or economic reasons unrelated to tobacco disease, often resulting in settlements that gave the industry marketing and public relations advantages. Even a lengthy health focused boycott of tobacco industry food subsidiaries accomplished little, making demands the industry was unlikely to meet. In contrast, a perimetric boycott (targeting institutions at the perimeter of the core target) of an organisation that was taking tobacco money mobilised its constituency and convinced the organisation to end the practice.

Conclusions: Direct boycotts of the industry have rarely advanced tobacco control. Perimetric boycotts of industry allies offer advocates a promising tool for further marginalising the industry. Successful boycotts include a focus on the public health consequences of tobacco use; an accessible point of pressure; a mutual interest between the target and the boycotters; realistic goals; and clear and measurable demands.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Naphtali Offen, Elizabeth A. Smith, and Ruth E. Malone, "The perimetric boycott: A tool for tobacco control advocacy" (2005). Tobacco Control. 14 (2), pp. 272-277. 10.1136/tc2005.011247. Postprint available free at: http://repositories.cdlib.org/postprints/1091

REQUIRED PUBLISHER STATEMENT:
Published by the BMJ Publishing Group.

 
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