The World Health Organization warned today that countries will need to be much more aggressive in their attempts to stamp out smoking if they are to counter the tobacco industry's marketing techniques (WHO, 2008).
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
BarbeauE.M.KriegerN., & SoobaderM-J. (2004). Working class matters: Socioeconomic disadvantage, race/ethnicity, gender, and smoking in NHIS 2000. American Journal of Public Health, 94(2), 269–278.
2.
BarnettR.MoonG., & KearnsR. (2004). Social inequality and ethnic differences in smoking in New Zealand. Social Science & Medicine, 59, 129–143.
3.
BayerR., & ColgroveJ. (2002). Science, politics, and ideology in the campaign against environmental tobacco smoke. American Journal of Public Health, 92(6), 949–954.
4.
BayerR., & StuberJ. (2006). Tobacco control, stigma, and public health: Rethinking the relations. American Journal of Public Health, 96(1), 47–50.
5.
BellK. (2011). Legislating abjection? Secondhand smoke, tobacco control policy and the public's health. Critical Public Health, 21(1), 49–62.
BellK., & KeaneH. (2012). Nicotine control: E-cigarettes, smoking and addiction. International Journal of Drug Policy, 23(3), 242–247.
8.
BellK.SalmonA.BowersM.BellJ., & McCulloughL. (2010). Smoking, stigma and tobacco “denormalization”: Further reflections on the use of stigma as a public health tool. Social Science and Medicine, 70, 795–799.
9.
BerridgeV. (1998). Science and policy: The case of postwar British smoking policy. In LockS.ReynoldsL.A., & TanseyE.M. (Eds.), Ashes to ashes: The history of smoking and health (pp. 143–162). Amsterdam: Rodopi.
10.
BerridgeV. (1999). Passive smoking and its pre-history in Britain: Policy speaks to science?Social Science & Medicine, 49, 1183–1195.
11.
BrandtA.M. (1997). Behavior, disease, and health in the twentieth-century United States: The moral valence of individual risk. In BrandtA.M. & RozinP. (Eds.), Morality and health: Interdisciplinary perspectives (pp. 53–77). London: Routledge.
12.
BrandtA.M. (2007). The cigarette century: The rise, fall and deadly persistence of the product that defined America. New York: Basic Books.
DennisS. (2006). Four milligrams of phenomenology: An anthrophenomenological analysis of smoking cigarettes. Popular Culture Review, 17(1), 41–57.
15.
DennisS. (2011). Smoking causes creative responses: On state antismoking policy and resilient habits. Critical Public Health, 21(1), 25–35.
16.
DennisS. (in press). Researching smoking in the new Smokefree: Good anthropological reasons for unsettling the public health grip. Health Sociology Review.
17.
GrahamH. (1993). When life's a drag: Women, smoking and disadvantage. London: Department of Health.
18.
GreavesL. (1996). Women's smoking and social control. Halifax, Canada: Fernwood Publishing.
19.
HallW.D. (2005). The prospects for harm reduction. International Journal of Drug Policy, 16, 139–142.
20.
HarmanJ.GrahamJ.FrancisB.InskipH.M., & the SWS Study Group (2006). Socioeconomic gradients in smoking among young women: A British survey. Social Science & Medicine, 63(11), 2791–2800.
21.
HiltonM., & NightingaleS. (1998). “A microbe of the devil's own make”: Religion and science in the British anti-tobacco movement, 1853–1908. In HiltonM.LockS.ReynoldsL.A., & TanseyE.M. (Eds.), Ashes to ashes: The history of smoking and health (pp. 41–63). Amsterdam: Rodopi.
22.
HuismanM.KunstA.E., & MacKenbachJ.P. (2005). Inequalities in the prevalence of smoking in the European Union: Comparing education and income. Preventive Medicine, 40(6), 756–764.
23.
HuntG., & BarkerJ.C. (2001). Socio-cultural anthropology and alcohol and drug research: Towards a unified theory. Social Science & Medicine, 53, 165–188.
24.
KapfererB. (2006). Anthropology and the dialectic of the enlightenment: A discourse on the definition and ideals of a threatened discipline. Australian Journal of Anthropology, 18(1), 72–96.
25.
KeaneH. (2002). Smoking, addiction, and the making of time. In BrodieJ.F. & RedfieldM. (Eds.), High anxieties: Cultural studies in addiction (pp. 119–133). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
26.
KleinR. (1993). Cigarettes are sublime. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
27.
LevyD.T.MumfordE.A.CummingsK.M.GilpinE.A.GiovinoG.HylandA. (2004). The relative risks of low-nitrosamine smokeless tobacco product compared with smoking cigarettes: Estimates of a panel of experts. Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention, 13(12), 2035–2042.
28.
LuikJ.C. (1996). “I can't help myself”: Addiction as ideology. Human Psychopharmacology, 11, S21–S32.
29.
MacNaughtonJ.Carro-RipaldaS., & RussellA. (2012). “Risking enchantment”: How are we to view the smoking person?Critical Public Health, 22(4), 455–469.
30.
MairM., & KieransC. (2007). Critical reflections on the field of tobacco research: The role of tobacco control in defining the tobacco research agenda. Critical Public Health, 17(2), 103–112.
31.
McCulloughL. (2011). The sociality of smoking in the face of anti-smoking policies. In BellK.McNaughtonD., & SalmonA. (Eds.), Alcohol, tobacco and obesity: Morality, mortality and the new public health (pp. 132–145). London: Routledge.
32.
McKieL.LaurierE.TaylorR.J., & LennoxA.S. (2003). Eliciting the smoker's agenda: Implications for policy and practice. Social Science & Medicine, 56, 83–94.
33.
McNeillA. (2004). Harm reduction. British Medical Journal, 328, 885–887.
34.
MooreD. (2010). Editor's introduction: Taking Contemporary Drug Problems into a new era. Contemporary Drug Problems, 37(3), 375–377.
35.
RehmJ.TaylorB., & RoomR. (2006). Global burden of disease from alcohol, illicit drugs and tobacco. Drug and Alcohol Review, 25(6), 503–513.
36.
RoomR. (1984). Alcohol and ethnography: A case of problem deflation?Current Anthropology, 25(2), 169–191.
37.
RoomR. (2003). The cultural framing of addiction. Janus Head, 6(2), 221–234.
38.
SingleE.RobsonL.RehmJ., & XiX. (1999). Morbidity and mortality attributable to alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drug use in Canada. American Journal of Public Health, 89(3), 385–390.
39.
SmithC.B.R. (2012). Harm reduction as anarchist practice: A user's guide to capitalism and addiction in North America. Critical Public Health, 22(2), 209–221.
40.
SullumJ. (1998). For your own good: The anti-smoking crusade and the tyranny of public health. New York: The Free Press.
41.
SweanorD.AlcabesP., & DruckerE. (2007). Tobacco harm reduction: How rational public policy could transform a pandemic. International Journal of Drug Policy, 18, 70–74.
42.
TateC. (1999). Cigarette wars: The triumph of the little white slaver. New York: Oxford University Press.
ZimringF.E. (1993). Comparing cigarette policy and illicit drug and alcohol control. In RabinR.L. & SugarmanS.D. (Eds.), Smoking policy: Law, politics and culture (pp. 95–109). New York: Oxford University Press.