기사
NEOLIBERAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH EFFECTS OF FAILING TO ADOPT OSHA'S NATIONAL SECONDHAND TOBACCO SMOKE RULE /
- 개인저자
- Givel, Michael
- 수록페이지
- 137-156 p.
- 발행일자
- 2006.01.25
- 출판사
- Baywood Publishing Company
초록
[영문]From the early 1980s to the present, neoliberal doctrine has called for government policies of privatization, funding cutbacks, and deregulation of public health and other domestic social programs in the belief that the market rather than the public sector can best organize and distribute crucial societal services. Proponents of a neoliberal and deregulatory mixed approach of command and control and self-regulation argue this approach provides the most adequate means to conduct regulation in the legalistic and adversarial U.S. regulatory process. In April 1994, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration issued a proposed rule to eliminate tobacco smoking in most workplace rooms, arguing secondhand tobacco smoke annually killed up to 13,700 nonsmokers. The tobacco industry purposely delayed public hearing procedures (later halted altogether by Congress and the president) primarily to advance unhindered private property rights and profits rather than submitting to a public command-and-control regulatory framework to reduce deaths due to secondhand tobacco smoke.