A. Ayorinde, E. Raja, A. Shetty, Peter Danielian, Sohinee Bhattacharya
{"title":"OP50广告立法的利益相关者框架:对英国媒体和议会代表的分析Évin","authors":"A. Ayorinde, E. Raja, A. Shetty, Peter Danielian, Sohinee Bhattacharya","doi":"10.1136/jech-2018-SSMabstracts.50","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background The Loi Évin legislation restricts alcohol advertising in France, and is more comprehensive than the self-regulation-based UK approach. This project aimed to analyse how the Loi Évin has been represented in UK media and parliament by the advertising and alcohol industries, politicians and non-governmental organisations. It is important to understand this because it can potentially shed light on how stakeholders, including industry, frame the debate around public health policy. Methods Qualitative analysis of media and parliamentary documents using the hermeneutic method, assessing contexts in which the Loi Évin was mentioned by stakeholders in the media and in parliament. Print and trade media articles referencing the Loi Évin were retrieved from the PROQUEST media archive [from 1985–2016]. UK parliamentary representations referencing the Loi Évin were obtained from the parliamentary database for publications and the Hansard parliamentary record. In total, 109 documents referencing the Loi Évin were identified, of which 71 (44 articles from ProQuest, 27 from parliamentary sources) contained direct quotes from stakeholders and were therefore included. These were analysed thematically using the hermeneutic method, which involved reading and understanding meanings of individual texts, in this case the contexts in which the Loi Évin was mentioned, identifying sub-themes or ‘codes’, grouping these into broader thematic clusters of codes, triangulating findings between different sources (for example, identifying similar arguments in print media and evidence submissions), assessing the reliability/validity of findings (through verification of coding by a second researcher), and illustrative use of representative case material. All coding was performed using NVivo 11.3.2. Results The alcohol and advertising industries have framed the Loi Évin as incompatible with EU principles, irrational and ineffective, with their arguments changing over time in response to landmark events and rulings. Supporters of Loi Évin-style legislation by contrast failed to counter industry framing of arguments around the link between regulations and overall consumption changes. Conclusion The portrayal of the Loi Évin by industry in the UK is an important case study of policy framing, and provides evidence of the synergy between the advertising and alcohol industries in combatting legislation that could potentially harm profit. Public health professionals practitioners, academics and advocates should be aware of the nature of such industry arguments when considering submissions to policy development processes.","PeriodicalId":15778,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health","volume":"83 1","pages":"A25"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"OP50 Stakeholder framing of advertising legislation: an analysis of media and parliamentary representations of the loi Évin in the UK\",\"authors\":\"A. Ayorinde, E. Raja, A. Shetty, Peter Danielian, Sohinee Bhattacharya\",\"doi\":\"10.1136/jech-2018-SSMabstracts.50\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Background The Loi Évin legislation restricts alcohol advertising in France, and is more comprehensive than the self-regulation-based UK approach. This project aimed to analyse how the Loi Évin has been represented in UK media and parliament by the advertising and alcohol industries, politicians and non-governmental organisations. It is important to understand this because it can potentially shed light on how stakeholders, including industry, frame the debate around public health policy. Methods Qualitative analysis of media and parliamentary documents using the hermeneutic method, assessing contexts in which the Loi Évin was mentioned by stakeholders in the media and in parliament. Print and trade media articles referencing the Loi Évin were retrieved from the PROQUEST media archive [from 1985–2016]. UK parliamentary representations referencing the Loi Évin were obtained from the parliamentary database for publications and the Hansard parliamentary record. In total, 109 documents referencing the Loi Évin were identified, of which 71 (44 articles from ProQuest, 27 from parliamentary sources) contained direct quotes from stakeholders and were therefore included. These were analysed thematically using the hermeneutic method, which involved reading and understanding meanings of individual texts, in this case the contexts in which the Loi Évin was mentioned, identifying sub-themes or ‘codes’, grouping these into broader thematic clusters of codes, triangulating findings between different sources (for example, identifying similar arguments in print media and evidence submissions), assessing the reliability/validity of findings (through verification of coding by a second researcher), and illustrative use of representative case material. All coding was performed using NVivo 11.3.2. Results The alcohol and advertising industries have framed the Loi Évin as incompatible with EU principles, irrational and ineffective, with their arguments changing over time in response to landmark events and rulings. Supporters of Loi Évin-style legislation by contrast failed to counter industry framing of arguments around the link between regulations and overall consumption changes. Conclusion The portrayal of the Loi Évin by industry in the UK is an important case study of policy framing, and provides evidence of the synergy between the advertising and alcohol industries in combatting legislation that could potentially harm profit. Public health professionals practitioners, academics and advocates should be aware of the nature of such industry arguments when considering submissions to policy development processes.\",\"PeriodicalId\":15778,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health\",\"volume\":\"83 1\",\"pages\":\"A25\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2018-09-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2018-SSMabstracts.50\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2018-SSMabstracts.50","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
Loi Évin立法限制法国的酒精广告,比英国的自我监管方法更全面。该项目旨在分析Loi Évin如何在英国媒体和议会中被广告和酒精行业、政治家和非政府组织所代表。理解这一点很重要,因为它可能揭示包括工业界在内的利益攸关方如何围绕公共卫生政策进行辩论。方法使用解释学方法对媒体和议会文件进行定性分析,评估媒体和议会利益相关者提到法律Évin的语境。引用Loi Évin的印刷和贸易媒体文章从PROQUEST媒体档案中检索[1985-2016年]。从议会出版物数据库和英国议事录中获得了联合王国议会关于法律Évin的陈述。总共有109份文件引用了《法律法规Évin》,其中71份(44篇来自ProQuest, 27篇来自议会)直接引用了利益相关者的意见,因此被纳入其中。使用解释学方法对这些文本进行了主题分析,其中包括阅读和理解个别文本的含义,在这种情况下,是提到《法典》Évin的上下文,确定子主题或“代码”,将这些代码分组为更广泛的主题代码集群,对不同来源之间的发现进行三角测量(例如,识别印刷媒体和证据提交中的类似论点),评估研究结果的可靠性/有效性(通过第二位研究人员对编码的验证),并使用代表性案例材料进行说明。所有编码均使用NVivo 11.3.2进行。结果酒精和广告行业将《法律Évin》框定为与欧盟原则不相容,不合理且无效,他们的论点随着时间的推移而改变,以响应具有里程碑意义的事件和裁决。相比之下,Loi Évin-style立法的支持者未能反驳围绕监管与整体消费变化之间联系的行业框架论点。英国行业对法律Évin的描述是政策制定的一个重要案例研究,并提供了广告和酒精行业在打击可能损害利润的立法方面的协同作用的证据。公共卫生专业人员、从业人员、学者和倡导者在考虑向政策制定进程提交的材料时,应了解这种行业论点的性质。
OP50 Stakeholder framing of advertising legislation: an analysis of media and parliamentary representations of the loi Évin in the UK
Background The Loi Évin legislation restricts alcohol advertising in France, and is more comprehensive than the self-regulation-based UK approach. This project aimed to analyse how the Loi Évin has been represented in UK media and parliament by the advertising and alcohol industries, politicians and non-governmental organisations. It is important to understand this because it can potentially shed light on how stakeholders, including industry, frame the debate around public health policy. Methods Qualitative analysis of media and parliamentary documents using the hermeneutic method, assessing contexts in which the Loi Évin was mentioned by stakeholders in the media and in parliament. Print and trade media articles referencing the Loi Évin were retrieved from the PROQUEST media archive [from 1985–2016]. UK parliamentary representations referencing the Loi Évin were obtained from the parliamentary database for publications and the Hansard parliamentary record. In total, 109 documents referencing the Loi Évin were identified, of which 71 (44 articles from ProQuest, 27 from parliamentary sources) contained direct quotes from stakeholders and were therefore included. These were analysed thematically using the hermeneutic method, which involved reading and understanding meanings of individual texts, in this case the contexts in which the Loi Évin was mentioned, identifying sub-themes or ‘codes’, grouping these into broader thematic clusters of codes, triangulating findings between different sources (for example, identifying similar arguments in print media and evidence submissions), assessing the reliability/validity of findings (through verification of coding by a second researcher), and illustrative use of representative case material. All coding was performed using NVivo 11.3.2. Results The alcohol and advertising industries have framed the Loi Évin as incompatible with EU principles, irrational and ineffective, with their arguments changing over time in response to landmark events and rulings. Supporters of Loi Évin-style legislation by contrast failed to counter industry framing of arguments around the link between regulations and overall consumption changes. Conclusion The portrayal of the Loi Évin by industry in the UK is an important case study of policy framing, and provides evidence of the synergy between the advertising and alcohol industries in combatting legislation that could potentially harm profit. Public health professionals practitioners, academics and advocates should be aware of the nature of such industry arguments when considering submissions to policy development processes.