2019
DOI: 10.17061/phrp2931924
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Philip Morris International’s use of Facebook to undermine Australian tobacco control laws

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Cited by 3 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…PMI, for example, operates a Facebook page that has more than 1 million followers. 53 Google also has an advertising policy on dangerous products or services and prohibits tobacco or any products containing tobacco; products that form a component of a tobacco product, as well as products and services that directly facilitate or promote tobacco consumption; and products designed to simulate tobacco smoking. 54 Google searches for tobacco retailers though, for example, provide localised results and direct links to sales outlets.…”
Section: Taps In Entertainment and Online Mediamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PMI, for example, operates a Facebook page that has more than 1 million followers. 53 Google also has an advertising policy on dangerous products or services and prohibits tobacco or any products containing tobacco; products that form a component of a tobacco product, as well as products and services that directly facilitate or promote tobacco consumption; and products designed to simulate tobacco smoking. 54 Google searches for tobacco retailers though, for example, provide localised results and direct links to sales outlets.…”
Section: Taps In Entertainment and Online Mediamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given only two studies (45,46) have investigated how unhealthy commodity actors use social media exclusively to influence policy debates, both analysing the tobacco industry, no single framework exists against which to deductively code lobbying strategies deployed by industry actors on social media. Instead, analysis drew on precedent in these studies.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In analysing 4143 tweets from nine industry actors and trade associations, the volume of data used to construct this framework is thoroughly relative to both existing studies exploring how the tobacco industry influences policy debates on social media. Of these, one analysed a month of Facebook posts (n 25) from one tobacco company (45) , while the other analysed 4 years of tweets (n 3301) from the leading four tobacco companies (46) . By creating a framework of messaging strategies and arguments used on social media with a primary intention of influencing policy debates, a strength of this framework is that it can be used in several ways.…”
Section: Strengths and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The papers in this special issue provide important new insights on a number of these areas, in regard to corporate behaviour 16 and relationships with government 17,18 , media framing of issues 19 and strategies to bring about change. 20,21 We believe these papers can help inform how we move forward on these issues.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%