ABSTRACT

The need to reduce disability and premature deaths from non-communicable diseases (NCDs) is increasingly engaging international organisations and national and sub-national governments. In this book, experts from a range of backgrounds provide insights into the legal implications of regulating tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy foods, all of which are risk factors for NCDs. As individual countries and the international community move to increase targeting of these risk factors, affected industries are turning to national and international law to challenge the resulting regulations.

This book explores how the effective regulation of tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy foods can be achieved within the context of international health law, international trade and investment law, international human rights law, international intellectual property law, and domestic laws on constitutional and other matters. Its contributors consider the various tensions that arise in regulating NCD risk factors, as well as offering an original analysis of the relationship between evidence and health regulation.

Covering a range of geographical areas, including the Americas, the European Union, Africa and Oceania, the book offers lessons for health and policy practitioners and scholars in navigating the complex legal fields in which the regulation of tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy foods takes place.

part II|127 pages

NCD Risk Regulation under International and Comparative Law

chapter 5|24 pages

International Trade Law

chapter 6|21 pages

International Investment Law

chapter 9|20 pages

Constitutional Perspectives

United Kingdom and South Africa

part III|144 pages

National and Regional Perspectives of NCD Risk Regulation

chapter 10|19 pages

United States

chapter 11|20 pages

Canada

chapter 12|27 pages

Latin America

chapter 13|17 pages

European Union

chapter 14|20 pages

Africa

chapter 15|19 pages

New Zealand

Regulation of Tobacco, Alcohol and Unhealthy Food in New Zealand and Coordinating the Trans-Tasman Relationship

chapter 16|20 pages

Australia

part IV|26 pages

Case Study of a Legal Dispute