Faculty of Medicine, School of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill University, 3630 Promenade Sir William Osler, Montreal, QC, H3G 1Y5, Canada.
School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2018 Nov 28;18(1):1321. doi: 10.1186/s12889-018-6157-3.
In 2009, Canada adopted legislation (Bill C-32) restricting the sale of flavoured tobacco products, one of the first in the world. This study examines the agenda-setting process leading to the adoption of Bill C-32.
This research was conducted using a case study design informed by Kingdon's Multiple Streams framework and Heclo's policy learning approach. In-depth interviews were conducted with key informants from government, health-based non-governmental organizations (NGOs), trade associations and the cigar manufacturing sector (n = 11). Public documents produced by media (n = 19), government (n = 11), NGOs (n = 15), as well as technical reports (n = 8) and formal stakeholder submissions (n = 137) were included for analysis. Data were coded with the objective of understanding key events or moments in the lead up to the adoption of Bill C-32 and the actors and arguments in support of and opposition to Bill C-32.
The findings point to the importance of a small but active group of NGOs who worked to publicize the issue and eventually take advantage of an open policy window. Our analysis also illustrates that even though consensus was developed about the policy problem and civil society was able to garner political support to address the problem, disagreement and dissent pertaining to the technical dimensions of the policy solution created loopholes for the tobacco industry to exploit.
NGOs remain a critical factor in efforts to strengthen tobacco control policy. These organizations were able to mobilize support for the tobacco flavouring ban adopted at the Federal level in Canada, and although the initial Bill had major limitations to achieving the health objectives, the persistence of these NGOs resulted in amendments to close these loopholes.
2009 年,加拿大通过了立法(C-32 法案),限制调味烟草制品的销售,这在世界上尚属首例。本研究考察了促成 C-32 法案通过的议程设置过程。
本研究采用案例研究设计,借鉴了金登的多源流框架和赫克托的政策学习方法。对来自政府、基于健康的非政府组织(NGO)、贸易协会和雪茄制造部门的 11 名关键人员进行了深入访谈。还对媒体(19 份)、政府(11 份)、非政府组织(15 份)发布的公开文件以及技术报告(8 份)和正式利益相关者的意见书(137 份)进行了分析。对数据进行了编码,目的是了解在 C-32 法案通过之前的关键事件或时刻,以及支持和反对 C-32 法案的行为者和论点。
研究结果表明,少数活跃的非政府组织非常重要,他们努力宣传这一问题,并最终利用了一个开放的政策窗口。我们的分析还表明,尽管就政策问题达成了共识,民间社会也能够获得解决问题的政治支持,但针对政策解决方案的技术层面存在分歧和异议,为烟草业利用这些漏洞创造了机会。
非政府组织仍然是加强烟草控制政策努力的关键因素。这些组织能够在加拿大联邦一级为烟草调味禁令争取支持,尽管最初的法案在实现健康目标方面存在重大限制,但这些非政府组织的坚持导致了修正案的出台,以填补这些漏洞。