There is effective-c++ tag. Currently it has 80 questions.
Its tag info states:
Tag for implementing and understanding guidelines and recommendations in any of the books "Effective C++: 50 Specific Ways to Improve Your Programs and Designs", "More Effective C++: 35 New Ways to Improve Your Programs and Designs", "Effective Modern C++: 42 Specific Ways to Improve Your Use of C++11 and C++14", or "Effective STL: 50 Specific Ways to Improve Your Use of the Standard Template Library", by Scott Meyers.
Criteria for burnination:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? And is it unambiguous?
According to the tag info, there are several different books on different topics which makes it ambiguous enough. Also effective is rather broad term and all kinds of things can be put under the effective umbrella.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Definition of effective is too broad and not focused even when constrained to single language. It is about writing effective code (what does that even mean? Fast, easy to maintain code...) being effective in writing code, being effective designing the APIs or larger systems...
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No, certainly not.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Since it covers several books it does not clearly describe same thing in all common contexts.
Can someone be an expert in effective C++?
Not really. You can be expert in C++. Being expert in effective C++ is meaningless.
Additionally, we don't have tags for books, authors, companies as they don't add any meaningful information to the post. Any code concepts and tricks that may be described in any of those books will clearly fall under the C++ tag and general coding practices. Question must stand on its own even without the book reference.