Literature DB >> 27037612

The post-2015 landscape: vested interests, corporate social responsibility and public health advocacy.

Clare Herrick1.   

Abstract

This paper explores the tensions between UN calls for private sector engagement in the post-2015 landscape and public health opposition to those 'harm industries' that are 'corporate vectors of disease' for the mounting global non-communicable disease burden. The UN's support for public-private partnership has provided industries with 'vested interests' in the propagation of unhealthy behaviours with new opportunities for the strategic alignment of their corporate social responsibility (CSR) endeavours with the post-2015 sustainable development agenda. This has galvanised public health advocates to place pressure on the World Health Organisation to formalise their ambiguous stance towards private sector involvement in public policy formation and the resultant 'conflicts of interest'. This paper critically examines the 'gathering storm' between this 'anti-corporate movement' and the alcohol industry in the increasingly politicised domain of CSR. Drawing on the example of SABMiller's Tavern Intervention Program, the paper argues that CSR represents a profound threat to the sanctity and moral authority of the public health worldview. Questions therefore need to be asked about whether the public health-led path of industry non-association will necessarily result in health improvements or just a further retrenchment of the ideological faultlines explored in the paper.
© 2016 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Governance; Policy analysis; alcohol/alcohol misuse

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27037612     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12424

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  5 in total

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3.  How commercial actors used different types of power to influence policy on restricting food marketing: a qualitative study with policy actors in Thailand.

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4.  Alcohol industry corporate social responsibility initiatives and harmful drinking: a systematic review.

Authors:  Melissa Mialon; Jim McCambridge
Journal:  Eur J Public Health       Date:  2018-08-01       Impact factor: 3.367

5.  What arguments and from whom are most influential in shaping public health policy: thematic content analysis of responses to a public consultation on the regulation of television food advertising to children in the UK.

Authors:  Ahmed Razavi; J Adams; Martin White
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-09-23       Impact factor: 2.692

  5 in total

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