Implementing FCTC Article 17 Through Participatory Research With Bidi Workers in Tamil Nadu, India

Abstract Introduction The exploitation, poor conditions, and precarity in the bidi (hand-rolled leaf cigarette) industry in India make it ripe for the application of the FCTC’s Article 17, “Provision of support for economically viable alternative activities”. “Bottom-up”, participatory approaches give scope to explore bidi rollers’ own circumstances, experiences, and aspirations. Methods A team of six community health volunteers using a participatory research orientation developed a questionnaire-based semi-structured interview tool. Forty-six bidi rolling women were interviewed by pairs of volunteers in two northern Tamil Nadu cities. Two follow-up focus groups were also held. A panel of 11 bidi rollers attended a workshop at which the findings from the interviews and focus groups were presented, further significant points were made and possible alternatives to bidi rolling were discussed. Results Bidi workers are aware of the adverse impact of their occupation on them and their families, as well as the major risks posed by the product itself for the health of consumers. However, they need alternative livelihoods that offer equivalent remuneration, convenience, and (in some cases) dignity. Alternative livelihoods, and campaigns for better rights for bidi workers while they remain in the industry, serve to undercut industry arguments against tobacco control. Responses need to be diverse and specific to local situations, i.e. “bottom-up” as much as “top-down”, which can make the issue of scaling up problematic. Conclusion Participatory approaches involving bidi workers themselves in discussions about their circumstances and aspirations have opened up new possibilities for alternative livelihoods to tobacco. Implications Progress with the FCTC’s Article 17 has generally been slow and has focussed on tobacco cultivation rather than later stages in the production process. The bidi industry in India is ripe for the application of an alternative livelihoods approach. This study is one of the first to use participatory methods to investigate the circumstances, experiences, and aspirations of bidi workers themselves.

[1]  S. Yoon,et al.  Women, tobacco, and human rights , 2021, Tobacco induced diseases.

[2]  K. Mukherjee,et al.  Alternative livelihood for bidi workers: a study based on primary research on home-based bidi rollers of Solapur city of Maharashtra , 2020 .

[3]  S. Bhaumik,et al.  The Indian Bidi Industry: Trends in Employment and Wage Differentials , 2020, Frontiers in Public Health.

[4]  S. Arnstein,et al.  Ladder of Citizen Participation , 2020 .

[5]  W. Madsen,et al.  Participatory Research for Health and Social Well-Being , 2018 .

[6]  Megha Sharma Recasting Language of Work: Beedi Industry in Post-colonial Central India , 2018 .

[7]  Siddharudha Shivalli,et al.  Occupational exposure to unburnt tobacco and potential risk of toxic optic neuropathy: A cross-sectional study among beedi rollers in selected rural areas of coastal Karnataka, India , 2017, PloS one.

[8]  P. Narayanan,et al.  Participation Pays: Pathways for post-2015 , 2015 .

[9]  F. Chaloupka,et al.  Estimates of the economic contributions of the bidi manufacturing industry in India , 2014, Tobacco Control.

[10]  Vincanne Adams Tobacco Capitalism : Growers , Migrant Workers , and the Changing Face of a Global Industry , 2014 .

[11]  S. Srinivasan,et al.  Occupational Health Problems Faced by Female Beedi Workers at Khajamalai, Trichy District, Tamil Nadu , 2013 .

[12]  N. Fathima Thabassum A study on women Beedi workers at Vellore district in Tamilnadu , 2013 .

[13]  S. Lanka.,et al.  Conference of the Parties to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control , 2012 .

[14]  Saifuddin Ahmed,et al.  Gainfully employed? An inquiry into bidi-dependent livelihoods in Bangladesh , 2011, Tobacco Control.

[15]  Subburethina Bharathi Pugalendhi,et al.  A Study on Occupational Health Hazards Among Women Beedi Rollers in Tamilnadu, India , 2010 .

[16]  P. Lal Bidi ― A short history , 2009 .

[17]  M. Whitehead,et al.  Policies and strategies to promote social equity in health. Background document to WHO - Strategy paper for Europe , 1991 .

[18]  V. Berridge Smoking and public health. , 1987, Community Health Studies.