IMAGE
Doyle, Martin, 1956- :Two wrongs. 28 January 2015
- Date
- 2015
- By
- Scoop (Firm)
- Reference
- DCDL-0031200
- Description
Accompanying note from cartoonist states "The case being mounted in the Auckland High Court against John Key by prisoner Arthur Taylor has great merit. The law passed by Parliament in 2010 that blocks the right of prisoners to vote flies in the face of our own Bill of Rights. Section 12 of the NZBOR, one would have thought, guarantees the right to vote to all adults aged 18 and over. The cartoon depicts a prisoner labouring under this unfair 'leg iron'. But the leg iron itself is a form of crime committed by the State."
Depicts a prisoner inside prison walls straining at a leg-iron labelled ‘THEFT of right to vote’.
Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
- Use/Reproduction
- Please check copyright
- Access restrictions
- No access restrictions
- Part of
- Doyle, Martin Maurice Michael Thomas, 1956- :Digital cartoons
- Format
- 1 digital cartoon(s), Works of art, Digital images, Cartoons (Commentary)
Click to request to view this item, access digital version (if available), and see more information.
Usage
Purchasing this Item
This item is available as a high resolution download. A request to buy an image can take up to 10 working days to approve. It will depend on copyright and how the image is going to be used.
If this item has multiple pages, or is several items attached to a single record, you can use this form to order your copy.
Using this Item
You cannot copy this item except for the purpose of 'fair dealing' under the NZ Copyright Act. It cannot be used commercially without permission
If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the following credit:
If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the following credit:
Scoop (Firm). Doyle, Martin, 1956- :Two wrongs. 28 January 2015. Doyle, Martin Maurice Michael Thomas, 1956- :Digital cartoons. Ref: DCDL-0031200. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/35778776More information can be found in our terms of use.