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 2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health The Role of Civil Society in the FCTC* Process Laurent Huber Framework Convention Alliance (FCA)

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Presentation on theme: " 2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health The Role of Civil Society in the FCTC* Process Laurent Huber Framework Convention Alliance (FCA)"— Presentation transcript:

1  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health The Role of Civil Society in the FCTC* Process Laurent Huber Framework Convention Alliance (FCA) * FCTC: Framework Convention on Tobacco Control

2  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Section A The Roles of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and Civil Society in the FCTC Process

3  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 3 Learning Objective Provide an overview of the role of civil society in the World Health Organization (WHO) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiation process, from development to implementation and monitoring

4  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 4 The FCTC The first international public health treaty negotiated under the auspices of the WHO Objective: to protect present and future generations from the devastating health, social, environmental, and economic consequences of tobacco consumption and tobacco smoke exposure Roadmap that could lead to comprehensive tobacco control programs and strategies at the international, national, regional, and local levels

5  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 5 The FCTC as a Global Public Good “The WHO FCTC is a powerful global public good for health, in that it is catalyzing international health cooperation to reduce the burden of disease attributable to tobacco consumption” —World Health Organization

6  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 6 Challenges to FCTC Success In many countries, including many developing ones:  Domestic legislation is nonexistent or extremely weak  The tobacco control movement is in its infancy  Tobacco control is not perceived by politicians as a public health priority  Resources for tobacco control are nonexistent  The tobacco industry wields great political and economic power

7  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 7 Civil Society and NGOs in the FCTC Preamble of the WHO FCTC  Emphasizes special contribution of NGOs and other members of civil society to tobacco control efforts Article 4.7 of the WHO FCTC  The participation of civil society is essential in achieving the objectives of the Convention and its protocols

8  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 8 FCTC Process: NGO/Civil Society Participation Critical NGO involvement results in stronger treaties with shorter timelines  International Code on Marketing of Breast-Milk Substitutes  Landmine Treaty  FCTC NGOs have more political independence than governments or WHO NGOs can better catalyze and coordinate NGO coalitions The engagement of civil society in a treaty-making process is a key aspect of democracy and good governance Role of civil society and NGOs in this process is to raise the bar

9  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 9 UN Secretary General Report to UN General Assembly “The degree to which a world conference mobilizes the attention of NGOs and other organizations of civil society has become an important criterion for judging its success.” “The massive presence of NGOs... [has] increased public awareness of the conferences and the issues they dealt with and, ultimately, of the United Nations, and was a driving force for the setting of international norms and standards.” “Determined, knowledgeable and well-organized NGOs that are willing to form caucuses and alliances can achieve successes in advocacy and lend tremendous weight to international and United Nations-led campaigns.” —Kofi Annan (1998)

10  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 10 The Framework Convention Alliance (FCA) Comprised of 300+ NGOs from 100+ countries A true global tobacco control coalition Brought together health, consumer, human rights, environmental, religious, and other groups to address tobacco Powerful voice in WHO FCTC negotiation process Image source: Huber, L. (2006).

11  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 11 Mission of the Framework Convention Alliance The FCA mission is to carry out effectively the watchdog function for the WHO FCTC To develop tobacco control capacity, particularly in developing countries to support the ratification, accession, implementation, and monitoring of the FCTC To promote and support a network for global tobacco control campaigning

12  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 12 Civil Society’s Presence in the WHO FCTC Process FCA NGO representatives have participated in:  All six treaty negotiating sessions, as well as two working group sessions  Dozens of regional treaty meetings  Several annual meetings of the World Health Assembly  Two Open-Ended Intergovernmental Working Group (IGWG) meetings  The First Conference of the Parties (COP) and Expert Working group meetings

13  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 13 Images source: Huber, L. (2006). Ensured NGO Presence During WHO FCTC Negotiations A key element of FCTC success was ensuring that voices of world were present Governments and NGOs from around the world participated Presence of wealthy as well as low- and middle-income countries

14  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 14 Ensured NGO Presence During IGWG1, IGWG2, COP1 Images source: Huber, L. (2006).

15  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 15 Perspective from a Member of the U.S. Delegation “The NGOs in Geneva were well organized and outspoken.” “…an assortment of other NGOs banded together to form an umbrella organization called the Framework Convention Alliance.” “…the NGOs worked the halls masterfully and, for all intents and purposes, filled the roles of deeply entrenched Washington insiders.” — Gregory Jacob (2003) Source: The University of Chicago Journal of International Law. (2004).

16  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 16 Images source: Huber, L. (2006). Civil Society Expertise Civil society brought top experts to needed fields  Smoke-free policy, litigation, best practices, product health warnings, and other experts Provided powerful briefings for governments to use

17  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 17 Images source: Huber, L. (2006). FCA Bulletin

18  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 18 Images source: Huber, L. (2006). Briefings for Delegates Negotiating the WHO FCTC Provide expert testimony on the relevant issues and research

19  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 19 Staged Events During FCTC Meetings Images source: Huber, L. (2006).

20  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 20 Guidelines on Implementation/Elaboration of Protocol Treaty is a good road map—but not the final solution  A country could be fully compliant with FCTC without fully protecting the public’s health Guidelines are being developed by the Secretariat and the COP Guidelines will not be legally binding, but they will provide what constitutes effective evidence-based implementation of the articles of the treaty

21  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 21 Guidelines on Implementation/Elaboration of Protocol Civil society  Involved in the expert group tasked with elaborating a template for a protocol on illicit trade  Participated in the meeting of key facilitators, experts, and other interested parties on the elaboration of guidelines on Articles 8, 9, and 10  Participated in an ad-hoc study group on alternative crops

22  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 22 Civil society worked at the national level to promote the FCTC outside of the FCTC/WHO forum through Inter-governmental Negotiating Body Meetings Capacity building trainings were organized to assist implementation or ratification of the treaty by involving civil society at the national level Media to Advocate in Favor of the FCTC Images source: Huber, L. (2006).

23  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 23 Capacity Building in Tobacco Control Ca·pac·i·ty: the ability to perform functions, solve problems, and achieve objectives  United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) definition The ability to respond to tobacco control comprehensively Help NGOs develop specific, concise strategic plans to achieve a certain goal

24  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 24 Capacity Building Workshops Images source: Huber, L. (2006).

25  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 25 FCTC Role Assess needs or gaps that countries have at the national level Develop specific strategic plans Assist and provide grants to support country-level strategic plans

26  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 26 Capacity Building Trainings Images source: Huber, L. (2006).

27  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 27 Legislative Workshops and Legislative Clearing House Images source: Huber, L. (2006).

28  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 28 Images source: Huber, L. (2006). National Level Advocacy Events

29  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 29 Image source: adapted by CTLT from the World Health Organization. (2007). Regional/Sub-Regional Coordination More activities in support of tobacco control Better grants and proposals Better exchange of communication

30  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 30 Images source: Huber, L. (2006). International Advocacy Campaigns Online petitions Fax, letter campaigns Letters to presidents, prime ministers, kings Lobbying governments to sign/ratify/accede/ implement the FCTC

31  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 31 Image source: The Framework Convention Alliance. (2006). Ensuring Effective Implementation

32  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 32 Source: Nathan, R. (2004). Effective Evidence-Based Policies and Legislation

33  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 33 Article 21: Reporting and Exchange of Information “Each Party shall submit to the Conference of the Parties, through the Secretariat, periodic reports on its implementation of this Convention…” — FCTC Article 21 Source: World Health Organization. (2007).

34  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 34 Monitoring Implementation of the FCTC: COP Decision Parties agreed to a graduated reporting system under which they are required to report on some articles after two, five, and eight years of entry into force Parties agreed that their objective in reporting: “is to enable Parties to learn from each others’ experience in implementation and not to develop a checklist on implementation”

35  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 35 Image source: Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada. (2007). The Clock Is Ticking February 27, 2008  40 original ratifying countries must have health warnings on packages February 27, 2010  40 original ratifying countries must have ad ban in place

36  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 36 Monitoring the Implementation of the FCTC Civil society has the responsibility to develop and implement a monitoring and reporting mechanism whose mission is to monitor the implementation and respect of the Convention (a check list on implementation)  Example: The Land Mine Monitor: 1997 Mine Ban Treaty

37  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 37 Image source: The Framework Convention Alliance. (2006). FCA FCTC Monitor Data Collection System

38  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 38 What Is the FCA FCTC Monitor Data Collection System? Image source: The Framework Convention Alliance. (2006).

39  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 39 Who Will Collect the Data? Civil society and NGOs will collect and analyze the data around the world  They will make policy recommendations based on what is taking place at the national level

40  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 40 What Topics Will Be Included? Background information on key informant and country overview, includes information on:  Tobacco control programs  Non- governmental organizations  Media coverage  Industry interference

41  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 41 What Topics Will Be Included? FCTC implementation includes information on:  FCTC signature and ratification  FCTC obligations as outlined in Articles 6, 8, 11, and 13  Other FCTC initiatives

42  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 42 What Topics Will Be Included? Supplemental documents  Allow data collector to upload pictures, texts of legislation, and other examples

43  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 43 What Topics Will Be Included? Going beyond the numbers, including a narrative description of tobacco control in the country

44  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 44 Civil Society Monitoring of the FCTC June 30, 2007 during COP2 Mirrored the countries’ reports submitted to COP2 Image source: The Framework Convention Alliance. (2006).

45  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 45 ASEAN Tobacco Control Report Card Image source: Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance. (2007).

46  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 46 National Level Reports Images source: Organizaciones de la Sociedad Civil (OSCs). (2006).

47  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 47 National Level Reports Images source: Organizaciones de la Sociedad Civil (OSCs). (2007).

48  2007 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 48 National Level Reports Images source: Canada Coalition for Action on Tobacco. (2006).


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