This book reviews the challenges and opportunities in the implementation of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) at the regional and national levels in Africa. It contains an analysis of the relevant norms and monitoring mechanisms at the regional level, and case studies from selected African and other developing countries. The WHO has noted that tobacco use or exposure to tobacco is a major health risk factor for non-communicable diseases (NCDs). This volume highlights the importance of taking measures to control tobacco use in Africa with a view to preventing these risks. With contributions from experts from the Global South, the book provides a critical analysis of the role that human rights can play in mitigating the impact of tobacco use and NCDs, and the implementation of the FCTC. The book contains a systematic and in-depth analysis of how efforts to realise the right to health under international and regional law can help to address the incidence of tobacco use in the developing world. The collection will be an important resource for academics, researchers and policymakers working in the areas of public health law and international human rights.
This book reviews the challenges and opportunities in the implementation of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) at the regional and national levels in Africa. It contains an analysis of the relevant norms and monitoring mechanisms at the regional level, and case studies from selected African and other developing countries.
List of tables, List of Acronyms and Abbreviations, List of
Contributors, Preface, Acknowledgements,
Chapter 1- Introduction,
Chapter 2 -
The role of the African human rights system in promoting tobacco control and
addressing related non-communicable diseases,
Chapter 3 - The implementation
of the WHOs FCTC: Lessons from Ghana,
Chapter 4 - Challenges and
opportunities in the implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco
Control in South Africa,
Chapter 5 - An overview of Nigerias efforts in
addressing non-communicable diseases within the WHOs Framework Convention on
Tobacco Control,
Chapter 6 - Tobacco control and the right to health in
Kenya: Implementation of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
(FCTC),
Chapter 7 - Examining tobacco-related health rights in Zambia in
light of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control,
Chapter 8 - Tobacco
smoking and the law in Rwanda: Progress, challenges and perspectives,
Chapter
9 - The state of Zimbabwes compliance with the WHO Framework Convention on
Tobacco Control,
Chapter 10 - Assessing the level of compliance of the
domestic normative framework on tobacco products of Mauritius with the
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control,
Chapter 11 - The David and Goliath
tale of Uruguays tobacco control measures: Lessons for the region and
beyond,
Chapter 12 - Tobacco, health and regulations in India: A national
overview,
Chapter 13 - Beyond tobacco: Lessons on non-communicable diseases
from the Inter-American Human Rights System, Index
Ebenezer Durojaye is Professor and Head of Socio-Economic Rights Project at the Dullah Omar Institute, University of the Western Cape, South Africa.
Lucyline Nkatha Murungi is a Senior Lecturer and Assistant Director at the Center for Human Rights, University of Pretoria, South Africa.