- Minorities & Smoking – Home
- Taking Notice
- The Power of Tobacco Marketing ▼
- A History of Marketing Menthol to Minorities
- Supporting and Suppressing Minority Communities ▼
- Targeting Latinos
- Targeting Minority Women: A Marginalized Market
- Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act
- The DOC Response
- Recent Struggles
“A Novel Tobacco Lawsuit Dismissed”
News article by Joseph A. Slobodzian about the dismissal of a lawsuit that claimed that the tobacco industry violated the civil rights of African-Americans by targeting their communities in advertising and marketing campaigns
The Philadelphia Inquirer, page B3
September 24, 1999
Minority Lawsuits
During the 1990s, many smokers and their families brought thousands of individual and class action lawsuits against the tobacco industry, seeking financial compensation for the health care costs of smoking-related diseases. Plaintiffs also included members of ethnic minority groups, such as Native Americans and African Americans. Ironically, efforts to restrict or ban the sale of tax-free cigarettes on Native American reservations were not a high priority for either public health associations or plaintiff attorneys.
- Minorities & Smoking – Home
- Taking Notice
- The Power of Tobacco Marketing ▼
- A History of Marketing Menthol to Minorities
- Supporting and Suppressing Minority Communities ▼
- Targeting Latinos
- Targeting Minority Women: A Marginalized Market
- Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act
- The DOC Response
- Recent Struggles
Contact
Alan Blum, M.D., Director
205-348-2886
ablum@ua.edu
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