Demystifying Commercial Influences on Health: Applying Systems Dynamics Methodologies to Policy Processes Comment on "Using System Dynamics to Understand Transnational Corporate Power in Diet-Related Non-communicable Disease Prevention Policy-Making: A Case Study of South Africa". [PDF]
Orgill M +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Winston Churchill and South Africa: An Enduring, yet Debatable Connection, 1899–1955
Abstract The article traces Churchill's engagement with South Africa, from his time as a newspaper correspondent during the Anglo‐Boer War to his services in both Liberal and Conservative cabinets as well as, ultimately, his premiership. The discussion highlights three phases in this relationship.
LUVUYO WOTSHELA
wiley +1 more source
Advancing progress on tobacco control in low-income and middle-income countries through economic analysis. [PDF]
Small R +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
Curbing multinational digital tax avoidance with the general anti‐avoidance rule
Abstract Large multinational companies (MNCs) are increasingly leveraging the enormous value embedded in the global digital economy. This has resulted in numerous innovations; however, it has likewise resulted in the loss of billions of dollars in tax revenue to governments due to outdated laws that generally assume a brick‐and‐mortar economy and ...
Kathryn Kisska‐Schulze, Robert C. Bird
wiley +1 more source
Health policy implications of corporate social responsibility provisions in international investment agreements. [PDF]
Tissaoui T, Davis T, Trevena H, Thow AM.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Revised GDP data suggest that Japan was more than one‐third richer in 1874 than suggested by Maddison, and that Meiji period growth built on earlier development. Despite trend GDP per capita growth during the Tokugawa Shogunate, the catching‐up process only started after 1890 with respect to Britain, and after World War I with respect to the ...
Stephen Broadberry +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Plastic recycling: A panacea or environmental pollution problem. [PDF]
Singh N, Walker TR.
europepmc +1 more source
Liberalism as a Way of Political Life: The Case of George Brandis
The lawyer, politician, and diplomat George Brandis was the leading intellectual representative of moderate or “small‐l” liberalism in the contemporary Liberal Party. He criticised John Howard for an ad hoc balancing of liberalism and conservatism. Brandis believed the Liberal Party necessarily included conservatives, but to him their role was to be a ...
Geoffrey Robinson
wiley +1 more source
Why addressing conflicts of interest is essential to progress in reducing commercially driven health harms: Lessons from tobacco. [PDF]
Gilmore AB, Barry RA, Fabbri A.
europepmc +1 more source

