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Smoking (Public Health) Ordinance; Smoking ban; Smoking bans in the United Kingdom; List of smoking bans; List of smoking bans in Australia; Smoking bans in private vehicles; Smoking, Health and Social Care (Scotland) Act 2005; Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco; Students Working Against Tobacco; Sullivan Ordinance
An anti-smoking campaign called Truth targeted R. J. Reynolds for Project SCUM, arguing that it not only showed the usual exploitative tobacco marketing techniques but added to them an explicit contempt or even hatred for the people it was trying to market its products to. SF Weekly reported:
Following ASH Scotland campaigns, Scotland was the first part of the UK to introduce smoke-free public places legislation and the first part of the UK (and the third country globally) to declare a tobacco-free date (2034) as part of the Scottish Government's tobacco control strategy 'Creating a tobacco-free generation'. [32]
The FDA may have failed in its efforts to force Altria , Lorillard , and Reynolds American to display graphic images on their packaging as a warning against smoking, but that doesn't mean the ...
Britain's proposed law to ban smoking for younger generations could be shelved after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called a surprise election, putting one of his flagship policies in jeopardy as ...
Nick O'Teen is a fictional supervillain from British anti-smoking public service announcements in the 1980s, created by Saatchi & Saatchi and the Health Education Council of London in collaboration with DC Comics. The character is an enemy of Superman who uses various means to attempt to convince children to pick up tobacco smoking.
Britain's centre-left Labour Party, which won a general election last month, said in its campaign manifesto it planned to introduce some of the world's strictest anti-smoking rules by banning ...
A no smoking sign asserting that smoking would break the law. A smoking ban in England, making it illegal to smoke in all enclosed workplaces in England, came into force on 1 July 2007 as a consequence of the Health Act 2006. Similar bans had already been introduced by the rest of the United Kingdom: in Scotland on 26 March 2006, Wales on 2 ...