Lessons From Big Tobacco: How and Why Big Alcohol Created Social Aspects Public Relations Organizations
Alcohol Issues8 Huhti 2022

Lessons From Big Tobacco: How and Why Big Alcohol Created Social Aspects Public Relations Organizations

Lessons From Big Tobacco: How and Why Big Alcohol Created Social Aspects Public Relations Organizations The Alcohol Issues Podcast – Season 2 Episode 07

A new groundbreaking study changes our understanding of the alcohol industry, elucidating similarities and inter-relationships with the tobacco industry.

The researchers examined the Truth Tobacco Documents Library to gain unique insights regarding alcohol industry social aspects organizations. They analyzed content directly from industry actors themselves. This way the researchers are now able to tell the story of how and why Big Alcohol began creating public relations front groups.

This podcast episode with Jim McCambridge is part of Movendi International’s work to raise awareness about the unethical practices of the alcohol industry and how to advance public health oriented alcohol policy solutions.

Analyzing internal industry documents

In this episode host Maik Dünnbier talks with Professor Jim McCambridge. The conversation with Jim provides deep insights into the evolution of social aspects and public relations organizations that operate in the interest of alcohol companies. They discuss, for example, that based on the study’s findings alcohol companies’ front groups can no longer be called “social aspects” organizations.

In this conversation Prof. Jim McCambridge shares unique insights into the origins and purposes of alcohol industry “social aspects organizations” as portrayed in internal tobacco industry documents.

The guest

Jim McCambridge holds the Chair in Addictive Behaviours & Public Health at the University of York. Jim is also Visiting Professor at Linkoping University in Sweden, and Conjoint Professor at the University of Newcastle in Australia. Jim now holds a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award in Humanities and Social Science to advance study of the alcohol industry, public health sciences and policy. This supports one of two five-year research programmes that Jim leads.

Jim first trained in Sociology, then in Social Work, and went on to work with drug users. His PhD study, at the National Addiction Centre at the Institute of Psychiatry, was a randomised controlled trial of motivational interviewing for drug prevention among young people.

Jim’s scientific work is dedicated to policy-related research that seeks to develop our understanding of the roles the alcohol industry plays in national and international policy making context.

S2 E7 Topic

The alcohol industry regards the harms caused by the use of their products as a public relations issue that needs to be managed as such. So, in the 1950s the began working with the tobacco industry to devise strategies to undermine policy as well as science development.

Maik and Jim discuss what the long-term public relations goals of the alcohol are.

And they dive into three major developmental periods in the evolution of alcohol industry social aspects organizations to discuss which threats the alcohol industry felt they need to respond to and which strategies they deployed.

The conversation explores the objectives and methodology of the study entitled “The Origins and Purposes of Alcohol Industry Social Aspects Organizations: Insights From the Tobacco Industry Documents”.

Maik and Jim talk about two major questions:

  1. What is the strategic purpose of SAPROs for the alcohol industry? Why do they spend considerable amounts on SAPROs?
  2. And which major developmental periods in the evolution of alcohol industry social aspects organizations can be identified and what do we learn from them?

In the study, Jim and colleagues show that the alcohol industry identified the developing population-level understanding of alcohol problems in the 1980 as existential threat. That is a remarkable finding and so Maik discusses this issue in depth with Jim.

There is another remarkable thought in the study:

"It is challenging to contemplate just how profoundly the alcohol industry may have biased what we think we know about alcohol.”

Jim McCambridge, Jack Garry, and Robin Room, The Origins and Purposes of Alcohol Industry Social Aspects Organizations: Insights From the Tobacco Industry Documents, Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs 2021 82:6, 740-751

Jim talks about what that means and what could be done about this.

Resources for the episode

Increased pressure on risk industries to reduce their negative impact on society has resulted in an increasing volume of “risk” and “responsibility” communications from interest groups known as Social Aspects Public Relations Organizations (SAPROs).

Building on risk industry research from the public health sphere, this article examines the SAPRO phenomenon and situates it in the political public relations (PR) literature. Specifically, it considers how SAPROs perform an indirect lobbying function on behalf of their funding industries.

The U.S. distilled spirits industry regarded the harms caused by use of their products as a public relations issue to be managed. The strategy designed by H&K was founded on the importance of managing the science in highly similar ways to the approach they developed for the tobacco companies, reproducing a playbook of key messages that have endured for decades.

Feedback

Your feedback, questions, and suggestions for future topics and guests is most welcome. Please get in touch at: maik.duennbier@movendi.ngo.

You are most welcome to follow Movendi International and Maik Dünnbier on Twitter, too.

Jaksot(46)

Landmark Study Gives Canadian Government Failing Grades In Alcohol Policies

Landmark Study Gives Canadian Government Failing Grades In Alcohol Policies

Landmark Study Gives Canadian Government Failing Grades In Alcohol Policies The topic of today’s episode is the CAPE – the Canadian Alcohol Policy Evaluation. The CAPE is a world class scientific appr...

23 Huhti 202556min

When Less Is More: Health And Social Benefits From Reduced Alcohol Consumption

When Less Is More: Health And Social Benefits From Reduced Alcohol Consumption

When Less Is More: Health And Social Benefits From Reduced Alcohol Consumption In today’s show we’re discussing a brand new report that compiles world class evidence about what happens when alcohol co...

13 Maalis 20251h 3min

Nordic Alcohol Monopolies As Comprehensive Model For Preventing Alcohol Harm

Nordic Alcohol Monopolies As Comprehensive Model For Preventing Alcohol Harm

Nordic Alcohol Monopolies As Comprehensive Model For Preventing Alcohol Harm With this episode of the Alcohol Issues Podcast we bring you a special discussion of a special alcohol policy topic: how th...

3 Maalis 20251h 2min

Directly From Geneva: Inside the WHO Executive Board Meeting

Directly From Geneva: Inside the WHO Executive Board Meeting

Directly From Geneva: Inside the WHO Executive Board Meeting With this show, we bring you an inside view of the Executive Board meeting of the World Health Organization Director of Strategy and Advo...

13 Helmi 20251h 6min

New Report: "From Sports to Screens - Exposing Big Alcohol’s Predatory Practices in 2024"

New Report: "From Sports to Screens - Exposing Big Alcohol’s Predatory Practices in 2024"

New Report: "From Sports to Screens - Exposing Big Alcohol’s Predatory Practices in 2024" For the first episode in our fourth season we discuss a brand new report that reveals the unethical practices ...

31 Tammi 20251h 18min

What we know for sure – and what not – about the potential of policy measures to protect people from alcohol marketing

What we know for sure – and what not – about the potential of policy measures to protect people from alcohol marketing

What We Know For Sure – and What Not – About the Potential of Policy Measures to Protect People From Alcohol Marketing For the eleventh episode in our third season we discuss what we know for sure – a...

30 Tammi 20251h 11min

Countries Fail To Utilize Alcohol Policy In United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Frameworks

Countries Fail To Utilize Alcohol Policy In United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Frameworks

Countries Fail To Utilize Alcohol Policy In United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Frameworks For the tenth episode in our third season we discuss how countries are using the potential of ...

29 Tammi 202550min

Are We Moving Into a New Era For Alcohol Policy Globally?

Are We Moving Into a New Era For Alcohol Policy Globally?

Are We Moving Into a New Era For Alcohol Policy Globally?  Season 3, Episode 10 For the tenth episode in our third season we discuss the question of whether we’re moving into a new era for alcohol pol...

21 Joulu 202458min

Suosittua kategoriassa Politiikka ja uutiset

uutiscast
aikalisa
politiikan-puskaradio
ootsa-kuullut-tasta-2
rss-ootsa-kuullut-tasta
rss-pinnalla
tervo-halme
rss-vaalirankkurit-podcast
rss-podme-livebox
aihe
rss-asiastudio
the-ulkopolitist
rss-tasta-on-kyse-ivan-puopolo-verkkouutiset
rss-girls-finish-f1rst
otetaan-yhdet
et-sa-noin-voi-sanoo-esittaa
rss-50100-podcast
rss-polikulaari-pitka-kiekko-ja-muut-ts-podcastit
rss-ulkopoditiikkaa
rss-kaikki-uusiksi