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The 13th World Conference on Tobacco OR Health

Building capacity for a tobacco-free world

July 12-15, 2006, Washington, DC, USA



Thursday, July 13, 2006 - 3:30 PM
69-1

Building Global Solidarity: Taking on the Tobacco Industry Across Borders

Anna White, BA, Essential Action, P.O. Box 19405, Washington, DC 20036, Adeola Oluwole Akinremi, B.A, Journalists Action on Tobacco & Health (JATH), 11, Dideolu Court, Bolodeoku Street, off Ijaiye Road, 2nd gate bus-stop, Ogba, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria, Ogba, Nigeria, Ken Dahlgren, B.S., Reality Check - NY, 20 West Third, Suite 6, Jamestown, NY 14701, Juanita Recinos, Youth Leadership Institute, 3090 16th St. #202, San Francisco, CA 94103, Gabriela Regueira, Ambientes Saludables, Juana Azurduy 2157, Bahia Blanca, Argentina, Laokein Combo, M.S., Senegalese Anti-Tobacco Movement, C/o RESSIP-CONGAD, Sicap Sacre-Coeur 3, Villa no. 114, B.P: 4109 Dakar, Dakar, Senegal, Kathleen Pezzimenti, Montana Tobacco Use Prevention Program, 1400 Broadway, PO Box 202951, Helena, MT 59620, Akinbode Oluwafemi, Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth, Nigeria, #1, Balogun Street,, Off Obafemi Awolowo Way, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria, Frederick W. Folliott, AADAC - Alberta Alcohol & Drug Abuse Commission, Suite 101, 743 Railway Avenue, Canmore, AB T1W 1P2, Canada, Nicole M. Sutton, BA, Prevention and Control Program, Cancer Research Center of Hawaii, 1960 East-West Road, Biomedical Sciences Building C105, Honolulu, HI 96822, and Adriana Menendez, Fundacion VQ, Rambla O'Higgins 4707 ap 702, Montevideo, Uruguay.

Objective: For the past few years, several U.S. programs have been working to strengthen collaboration between North American tobacco control groups and groups in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Eastern/Central Europe. Since tobacco companies operate in most countries around the world and employ similar strategies of tobacco promotion and tobacco control legislation prevention in different locations, it is vital that tobacco control advocates foster transnational strategies of information exchange, industry monitoring, and advocacy campaigning.

Methods: Essential Action, the San Francisco Tobacco Free Project, Reality Check and their partners have collaborated closely with groups in West Africa and South America for several years. This collaboration became the foundation for organizing two separate delegations of North American tobacco control advocates abroad – one to Senegal and Nigeria (February 2004) and another to Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil (August 2005) – to share experiences, document tobacco industry marketing and labor practices, and engage in joint advocacy activities in favor of FCTC ratification and smoke free workplaces. West African advocates subsequently traveled to the U.S. to participate in advocacy events with their U.S. partners. And ongoing collaborations between North and South American groups are focused on strengthening local tobacco control policies, e.g. smokefree places.

Results: Cross-border partnerships offer benefits to tobacco control advocacy efforts, e.g. access to vital information and resources, international support for local and national tobacco control policies, and a deeper understanding of the nature of the key adversary to effective tobacco control legislation, the tobacco industry.



Web Page: www.essentialaction.org/tobacco