The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in Australia
Objective: To explore the incidence of the ‘revolving door’ phenomenon, whereby individuals move between positions in government and positions in the Australian alcohol, food and gambling industries. Methods: This exploratory study was composed of two substudies: 1) an analysis of existing Austra...
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doaj-82df0eff183948cd951194689fbafa932020-11-24T20:42:53ZengSax InstitutePublic Health Research & Practice2204-20912204-20912019-09-0129310.17061/phrp2931921The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in AustraliaNarelle M Robertson0Gary Sacks1Peter G Miller2School of Psychology, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC, AustraliaSchool of Health and Social Development, Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaSchool of Psychology, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC, AustraliaObjective: To explore the incidence of the ‘revolving door’ phenomenon, whereby individuals move between positions in government and positions in the Australian alcohol, food and gambling industries. Methods: This exploratory study was composed of two substudies: 1) an analysis of existing Australian Government Register of Lobbyists databases and related social network content; and 2) a series of 28 in-depth semistructured interviews with key informants discussing industry tactics for influencing policy, of which 15 interviewees explicitly discussed the revolving door phenomenon. Results: More than one-third of people registered on the Australian Government Register of Lobbyists were previously government representatives. We report on several examples of government employees going on to work directly for alcohol, food or gambling industries, some taking employment directly related to their previous employment in government. Key informants highlight the potential risks this poses to good governance. Conclusion: This study suggests that the revolving door that sees people move between roles in the Australian Government and alcohol, food and gambling industries is commonplace, creating a range of ethical and moral problems, and posing a risk to public health.https://doi.org/10.17061/phrp2931921revolving doorfoodalcoholtobaccogovernment |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Narelle M Robertson Gary Sacks Peter G Miller |
spellingShingle |
Narelle M Robertson Gary Sacks Peter G Miller The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in Australia Public Health Research & Practice revolving door food alcohol tobacco government |
author_facet |
Narelle M Robertson Gary Sacks Peter G Miller |
author_sort |
Narelle M Robertson |
title |
The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in Australia |
title_short |
The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in Australia |
title_full |
The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in Australia |
title_fullStr |
The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in Australia |
title_full_unstemmed |
The revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in Australia |
title_sort |
revolving door between government and the alcohol, food and gambling industries in australia |
publisher |
Sax Institute |
series |
Public Health Research & Practice |
issn |
2204-2091 2204-2091 |
publishDate |
2019-09-01 |
description |
Objective: To explore the incidence of the ‘revolving door’ phenomenon, whereby individuals move between positions in government and positions in the Australian alcohol, food and gambling industries.
Methods: This exploratory study was composed of two substudies: 1) an analysis of existing Australian Government Register of Lobbyists databases and related social network content; and 2) a series of 28 in-depth semistructured interviews with key informants discussing industry tactics for influencing policy, of which 15 interviewees explicitly discussed the revolving door phenomenon.
Results: More than one-third of people registered on the Australian Government Register of Lobbyists were previously government representatives. We report on several examples of government employees going on to work directly for alcohol, food or gambling industries, some taking employment directly related to their previous employment in government. Key informants highlight the potential risks this poses to good governance.
Conclusion: This study suggests that the revolving door that sees people move between roles in the Australian Government and alcohol, food and gambling industries is commonplace, creating a range of ethical and moral problems, and posing a risk to public health. |
topic |
revolving door food alcohol tobacco government |
url |
https://doi.org/10.17061/phrp2931921 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT narellemrobertson therevolvingdoorbetweengovernmentandthealcoholfoodandgamblingindustriesinaustralia AT garysacks therevolvingdoorbetweengovernmentandthealcoholfoodandgamblingindustriesinaustralia AT petergmiller therevolvingdoorbetweengovernmentandthealcoholfoodandgamblingindustriesinaustralia AT narellemrobertson revolvingdoorbetweengovernmentandthealcoholfoodandgamblingindustriesinaustralia AT garysacks revolvingdoorbetweengovernmentandthealcoholfoodandgamblingindustriesinaustralia AT petergmiller revolvingdoorbetweengovernmentandthealcoholfoodandgamblingindustriesinaustralia |
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1716821411960455168 |