HEPIA collaborated with Philip Morris
Our investigation, conducted across all Swiss university institutions, reveals a worrying finding: more than half of the institutions surveyed have cooperated at least once with the tobacco industry since 2019.
The tobacco industry has a long history of interference in scientific research, aimed at defending its commercial interests through manipulation, disinformation, and the discrediting of independent studies. In Switzerland, emblematic cases illustrate these practices, notably the Rylander affair at the University of Geneva, where a professor secretly collaborated with Philip Morris for more than thirty years to downplay the risks of passive smoking, or the controversial study by the University of Zurich on plain packaging, financed by the same company.
Collaborations between the tobacco industry and Swiss universities are not neutral. They grant this industry scientific legitimacy, which it can then use to:
This strategy follows a well-known logic: using research and academic prestige to steer public discussion, sow doubt, or shift the debate.
The lack of transparency highlighted by this investigation is particularly concerning. Several universities have refused to provide relevant documents, which is in contradiction with transparency laws. This opacity reflects a troubling commercialization of research institutions financed by public funds and undermines the credibility, independence, and integrity of science.
Would you like to know how your university ranks in terms of transparency and ties with the tobacco industry? Consult our ranking of Swiss universities here.
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