While smoking and obesity may have nuanced differences as public health problems, this Article briefly argues that those differences should not pose an obstacle to certain paternalistic attempts to regulate them similarly. Specifically, observed successes in reducing smoking through taxation, labeling requirements, and advertising bans could likewise prove successful in reducing obesity
Policy interventions aimed at affecting a specific behavior may also indirectly affect individual ch...
Policy interventions aimed at affecting a specific behavior may also indirectly affect individual ch...
In recent months, numerous localities and states have banned smoking in public places (i.e., private...
While smoking and obesity may have nuanced differences as public health problems, this Article brief...
The debate on tobacco and fat taxes often treats smoking and eating as independent behaviors. Howeve...
The debate on tobacco taxes and fat taxes often treats smoking and eating as independent behaviors. ...
This Article explores the role of paternalism in regulatory efforts to improve public health, focusi...
This Article examines—and ultimately rejects—this anti-paternalism argument against government anti-...
Public health agencies face considerable challenges trying to prevent overweight and obesity in soci...
There has been increasing attention paid to non-communicable disease risk factors including tobacco,...
The true subject of this Lecture is the question of why we regulate some things and not others, and ...
For at least a decade, commentators have speculated that obesity is the next tobacco, a public healt...
Tobacco is unhealthy, and apparently it is not hard to convince people that government programs are ...
Media coverage surrounding the New York City Department of Health’s recent portion-cap on sugary bev...
The first chapter demonstrates the impact of the obesity epidemic in the United States. The epidemic...
Policy interventions aimed at affecting a specific behavior may also indirectly affect individual ch...
Policy interventions aimed at affecting a specific behavior may also indirectly affect individual ch...
In recent months, numerous localities and states have banned smoking in public places (i.e., private...
While smoking and obesity may have nuanced differences as public health problems, this Article brief...
The debate on tobacco and fat taxes often treats smoking and eating as independent behaviors. Howeve...
The debate on tobacco taxes and fat taxes often treats smoking and eating as independent behaviors. ...
This Article explores the role of paternalism in regulatory efforts to improve public health, focusi...
This Article examines—and ultimately rejects—this anti-paternalism argument against government anti-...
Public health agencies face considerable challenges trying to prevent overweight and obesity in soci...
There has been increasing attention paid to non-communicable disease risk factors including tobacco,...
The true subject of this Lecture is the question of why we regulate some things and not others, and ...
For at least a decade, commentators have speculated that obesity is the next tobacco, a public healt...
Tobacco is unhealthy, and apparently it is not hard to convince people that government programs are ...
Media coverage surrounding the New York City Department of Health’s recent portion-cap on sugary bev...
The first chapter demonstrates the impact of the obesity epidemic in the United States. The epidemic...
Policy interventions aimed at affecting a specific behavior may also indirectly affect individual ch...
Policy interventions aimed at affecting a specific behavior may also indirectly affect individual ch...
In recent months, numerous localities and states have banned smoking in public places (i.e., private...