Equality

Egalitariansim, Inequality, Social equality, Social inequality
There are 74 related items to this topic
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Scott, Tom, 1947- :Twenty-one cartoons published in the Evening Post between 1 and 30 J...

Date: 1999

By: Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)

Reference: H-587-001/021

Description: Political cartoons. Shows a redneck's nightmare, ownership of the Whanganui River is given to Maori who loaded it onto the back of a truck and took it away. Comment on executive golden handshakes and reduntant workers having to sign up for the dole. Shows violent offenders at Paremoremo Prison selecting soft movies like 'The Sound of Music'. In the middle of a power blackout the family try and read the latest power bill, it's gone up. The effect on the opposition of Jonah Lomu being left on the reserve bench. Statue of Liberty calls for the poor and huddled masses but says 'no' to New Zealand lamb. Comment on New Zealand's response to America's tariffs on New Zealand lamb. The common man comments on Bill English upstaging Jenny Shipley at the National Party Conference. Maori MP calls for quotas in the public sector that will ensure employment for ethnic minorities. Hospital hygeine is called into doubt. A politician trys to sell the idea of deregulating the Dairy Industry. A woman comments to her husband that it's a good thing young men eventually grow out of wanting more sex. He wistfully agrees. Obituary for JFK Jr. 1960-1999 Comment on youth alcohol consumption. Auckland Hospital try to reassure the public all babies are born equally there but not necessarily treated equally after that. Comment on Christine rankin's over the top refurbishment of the dept of work and income. Celebration of three New Zealand triumphs. Mike Moore gets top job at WTO, the All Blacks beat the Australians and the Black Caps cricket team beat the English at Lords. Paul Holmes promotes his autobiography. F-16 fighter planes are promoted by an Air Force Officer. The lowering of the drinking age is debated in Parliament. Boys try to come to terms with the news that girls are better pupils than boys. Quantity: 21 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: B5 size bromides.

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Copies of cartoons published in Broadsheet between 1973 and 1979.

Date: 1990 - 1997

By: Broadsheet (Auckland, N.Z.); Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-; Nisbet, Alastair, 1958-; Kerr, Robert Edward, 1951-; Alston, Sharon Kathleen, 1948-1995; Lowry, Vanya, 1943-; Preston, Gaylene Mary, 1947-; Courtney, Helen Kathleen, 1952-2020; McLeod, Rosemary Margaret, 1949-

Reference: H-707-001/034

Description: Variety of cartoons commenting on the political and social issues of the time from a feminist perspective. Sexual harassment in the work place; a time-line across history of the political, religious and sexual treatment of women; man gets blown-up into a balloon; running the home like a business; women are the stronger sex?; woman fights an armoured knight on a horse; Michelangelo sculpts a naked man with an exaggerated penis; Women's Liberation; persecution against homosexuals likened to that perpetrated by the Nazi regime and the medieval church; Lesbian Nation; media interviewer, Brian Edwards leads a TV programme on the Women's Movement; Muldoon drinks a glass of wine bottled to commemorate Women's Suffrage Day, Sept. 19; while the men discuss world revolution, a woman pour them tea; the double violation of rape victims by their attacker and then by the justice system; the female anatomy exposed to a room full of male doctors; church women protest against feminism challenging the family and traditional roles of women; justice for some, but not for women; the feminist backlash; pay equity; perhaps god is a man after all - three wishes; May I have my rights, please? apologetic feminism; justice not weighted equally for all; issues around sexual reproduction and the Royal Commission Report; women unite to resist the intrusion of the SIS (Special Intelligence Service); Muldoon's legacy to New Zealand women; sex roles reversed in the shearing shed; abortions; National Party tramples on New Zealand women; position of women in Iran; genital mutilation; the 1979 budget - what's in it for women; SPUC anti-abortion rally likened to a Ku Klux Klan rally with hoods and burning torches; the marriage trap; psychology and the oppression of women. Quantity: 34 photocopy/ies. Physical Description: Photocopies in various sizes

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Copies of cartoons published in Broadsheet between 1990 and 1997.

Date: 1990 - 1997

By: Broadsheet (Auckland, N.Z.); Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-; Nisbet, Alastair, 1958-; Kerr, Robert Edward, 1951-; Alston, Sharon Kathleen, 1948-1995; Walker, Susan, active 1990s; Fowlie, Karen, 1990s; Quillin, Viv, active 1980s-1990s; Chanwai-Earle, Lynda, 1965-; Seule, Juliet, active 1990s; Sorzano, Rigel, active 1990s; Rhonda, active 1990s; Chadwick, Rona, active 1990s; Hollander, Nicole, active 1990s; Fleming, Jacky, active 1990s; Horacek, active 1990s; Jackson, Cath, active 1990s; Vania, Rustam, active 1990s; Peterson, Nancy, active 1980-1990s; Lowry, Vanya, 1943-

Reference: H-709-001/033

Description: Variety of cartoons commenting on the political and social issues of the time from a feminist perspective. National Women's Cervical Cancer inquiry, the value of women's experience in the work field when dealing with employers who are predominantly worried about a woman's period being heavy; questioning the relevance of Aids education information for lesbians; family discussion about orgasms; sexual harassment in the work place and the Employment Contracts Act; what are the options for a home-maker if her husband leaves her for another woman; ACC claims; men, women and housework; the stress of being too busy with activities and commitments; verbal abuse; siblings argue about being lesbian; 1993 - what women have to celebrate in Suffrage Year with Jenny Shipley and Ruth Richardson at the political helm; women can vote but thewy still remain disadvantaged in many areas; growing older; women respond to the Bobbitt Case (where a women cut off her partners penis); how lesbians can often feel inadequate when reading lesbian erotica books; being an independent, aggressive, adventurous girl doesn't win you many friends; men express themselves as women did in the 70's, but they're still slow to share their goodies with women; feminist collectives; never give up; 12 week campaign for maternity leave; seeking to silence her biological clock; pay equity; women and girls' self defence; beauty contests; the tree of life is a woman; wife slavery; a spell of warts for rich people; Women's Liberation targets your mother, sister and girl friend; Maori Women's Welfare League Conference poster, 1982; women lifting wieghts; dealing to a wolf whistler. Quantity: 33 photocopy/ies. Physical Description: Photocopies in various sizes

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Scott, Thomas, 1947- :20 cartoons published in the Evening Post between 1 and 28 Februa...

Date: 2002

By: Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)

Reference: H-674-027/046

Description: Cartoons on political and social issues. National Party leader, Jenny Shipley expresses hurt over the medias reporting of her retirement announcement. Comment on the New Zealand Cricket team getting into the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) through the backdoor. Shows a tertiary student weighed down by a huge student debt. Helen Clark walks with Titewhai Harawira on Waitangi Marae unrecognised by local Maori. Shows Finance Minister, Michael Cullen at the controls of Air New Zealand trying to reassure the flying public. Shows big banks slashing interest rates as a response to the fledgling Kiwi Bank. Comment on the Greens response to environmental disasters as long as there is a media presence. Helen Clark and Bill English outline their versions of closing-the-gaps strategies. Shows film director, Peter Jackson as Lord of the Oscars for Lord of the Ring's 13 nominations Australian Prime Minister, John Howard receives a box of bleeding heart chocolates from Helen Clark. Shows Ian Fraser about to assume his new position as head of TVNZ. Obituary to actor Kevin Smith with a Shakespearean quote. Comment on the Privacy Law that exposes a Judge for viewing pornography yet won't reveal if your flatmate is a homicidal maniac with a history of mental illness. Comment on the Alliance Party dealing with dissension in its ranks. A soldier is about to shoot his own foot. Two young men wonder where it all went wrong when women can talk openly about their vaginas yet a male judge can't look at vagina's in private. Shows Nandor Tanczos with his new Maori Sovereignty flay, a cross between a dope plant and unfurling koru. Comment on the poor season the Wellington Super 12 team, the Hurricanes have had. Michael Cullen and the Listeners, Gordon Campbell receive the award for getting something so wrong. They predicted that Lord of the Rings would be a huge drain on the NZ taxpayer. Bill English brings Helen Clark his own head on a plate as Labour surges in the polls. Obituary to Goon and poet, Spike Milligan along with a piece of poetry. Quantity: 20 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: B5 size bromides.

Audio

Interview with Beryl Hughes

Date: 08 Oct 1999

From: Women's Studies Association feminist oral history project

By: Abigail, Jill, 1939?-; Hughes, Beryl, 1920-2015; Women's Studies Association (N.Z.)

Reference: OHInt-0556-04

Description: Beryl Hughes was born in Cowbridge, South Wales in 1920. Describes parents, childhood in Scotland, and winning a secondary school scholarship. Describes studying at Glasgow University during World War II's blackouts and bombings. Talks about husband George Hughes, a professor. Describes experiences as a mother, moving to New Zealand, and involvement with Playcentre. Describes becoming a tutor at Victoria University, Wellington when she had four children, juggling paid work and family work, and working as a senior lecturer in the Victoria's History Department for 25 years. Comments on discrimination against women in New Zealand compared with in the United Kingdom. Discusses growth of awareness of feminist issues. Mentions the impact of Phillida Bunkle's arrival at Victoria University. Comments on male and class bias in history. Discusses development of the history of women, children and the working class. Describes the effect of feminism on her professional relationships in the History Department. Discusses involvement with Abortion Law Reform Association of New Zealand (ALRANZ) and comments on her mother's views on women's rights. Discusses ALRANZ relationship with the more feminist Women's National Abortion Action Campaign (WONAAC). Explains involvement in the establishment of Victoria Univerity's Women's Studies Department under guidance of Phillida Bunkle. Mentions being the first chair of Board of Women Studies, and presenting guest lectures on medieval women and women in the church. Talks about the first Women's Studies Association Conference in Hamilton. Describes Women's Studies' Beryl Hughes Prize for best essay awarded annually. Reflects on the women's movement currently. Discusses books she has co-authored: "Red brick and blue stockings" on women at Victoria University with Sheila Ahern, and "Women in New Zealand Society" with Phillida Bunkle. Mentions current involvement with Karori Historical Society Journal, retirement, and her concern about employment opportunities for youth. Publication - Twelve years of AWA: the Association of Women Academics of the Victoria University of Wellington, 1987 / Beryl Hughes Interviewer(s) - Jill Abigail Accompanying material - Biographical information form Quantity: 2 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 1 Electronic document(s) - abstract. 1 interview(s). 1.35 Hours and minutes Duration. Physical Description: Textual files - Microsoft word Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-2652, OHDL-001001.

Audio

Interview with Heather Bell

Date: 05 Feb 2001

From: Upper Hutt Uniting Parish Millennium Project

By: Bell, Renee Agnes, 1925-

Reference: OHInt-0593/08

Description: Renee Bell explains that she has been known as Heather since her marriage. Describes the informal church life in New Zealand compared to Ireland. Explains how she coped with her mother's death when thirteen and describes her church life when cared for by an aunt. Talks of her youth club membership, the Wellington District Women's Fellowship committee, various church committees, her work in the Thrift Shop and how the profits benefit the community, as well as the Smethurst and Friendship Funds. Relates travelling from Brooklyn to Wesley Taranaki Street. Talks of changes in leisure activities on Sundays, children and young people, gender equality. Interviewer(s) - Elaine Bolitho Arrangement: Tape numbers - OHC-009242 Quantity: 1 C60 cassette(s). 1 transcript(s) - printed. 1 Electronic document(s) - transcript. 1 interview(s). 1 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - transcript(s) available OHA-2971, OHDL-000929.

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Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :64 original cartoons published in the Dominion between 1990 and...

Date: 1990 - 2002

By: Bromhead, Peter, 1933-; Dominion (Newspaper)

Reference: A-366-316/379

Description: Cartoons on the weather, women, Christmas, forestry and the Forest Amendment Bill. Quantity: 64 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Black felt pen drawings on paper, sizes vary.

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Mayne, William Thomas, 1910-1988 :Equal pay for women... [1950s-1960s]

Date: 1950 - 1969

From: Mayne, William Thomas, 1910-1988 :490 original cartoons published in the Christchurch Star Sun and the Christchurch Star Sun Sports between 1954 and 1962.

Reference: A-387-192

Description: Shows five frames. In the first frame, a man says to his wife, 'So... when you get equal pay, we'll be able to live reasonably on TWO 40 hour weeks... until prices rise to equal the pay rise.' In the second frame, a woman is down on one knee, proposing to a man. The woman says, 'But, darling, I'm making fifteen hundred a year... have my own home and car... what more could you want?' The third frame shows a man wearing an apron and pouring a cup of tea. He says to another man, 'When we reckoned that two of us could live as cheaply as one, we didn't consider six of us... so...' In the fourth frame, a woman is asking an older woman for permission to marry her son. The final frame shows a man who is opening his wife's paypacket as he prepares dinner. The man is angry, and is saying to his wife, 'Now, look. This is five bob short! Have you been out soaking tea with the girls again?' Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink on card, 255 x 280 mm

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Fletcher, David, 1952- :"Remember people, I want a nice big gap down the middle!" "Are ...

Date: 1998

From: Fletcher, David :Twenty original cartoons published in the New Truth and TV Extra, August - December 1998.

Reference: A-322-119

Description: A three-panel strip showing Winston Peters with a whistle instructing two lines of students. Jenny Shipley asks if he is practising rugby line-outs, but he replies that he means the gap between rich and poor. Inscriptions: Recto - top left - D. Fletcher Quantity: 1 drawing(s). Physical Description: Ink and felt pen, 124 x 388 mm.

Manuscript

Papers

Date: 1987

From: University of Canterbury. Department of Education : Records of the first joint AARE/NZARE conference, Christchurch

Reference: 89-012-07

Description: Also includes papers by K A Le Claire, `Higher education access and participation'; `School results as predictors of medical school achievement' by A Lipton, G Husham and D Hamilton; `Evaluation and adaptation of a computer-assisted career guidance system in Australia' by J Lokan; `School-based assessment in the 1986 NSW higher school certificate' by B Low; `Diagrammatic materials and exploration strategies' by R K Lowe; `Learning the language of mathematics' and `Rescaling school-based assessments' by M MacGregor; `Whither primary teacher education?' by G MacLeod and Merle Rankin Also, `The hierarchical structure of academic self-concept: the Marsh-Shavelson model' by H W Marsh, B M Byrne and R J Shavelson; `Encounters of the first kind' by K Martinez; `Some issues in collecting case studies in TAFE curriculum' by C McBeath and W Richards; `Using the computer as a tool; implications for teacher inservice education' by D H McKinnon Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Manuscript

Socialist Unity Party's Auckland Regional Womens sub-committee

Date: n d

From: Jackson, George, 1908-2000 : Papers

Reference: 90-234-03/20

Description: Includes: Womens inequality - where it all began; Womens liberation and socialism - women in struggle Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Manuscript

Women's contribution in a changing society, and address by W B Sutch

Date: 20 Nov 1964

From: Simpson, Mīria, 1922-2002: Collection

Reference: 2002-379-085

Description: Address by Dr Sutch to a study conference organised by the Department of Adult Education, VUW, in co-operation with the Wellington Business and Professional Women's Club and the NZFUW, Wellington Branch, 20 Nov 1964 Quantity: 1 folder(s).

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Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989 : Capitulation to Women's Liberation Front invaders dur...

Date: 1970

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

Reference: B-137-035

Description: Shows two instances of women's encroachment into the male domain: a woman insists on a drink in a "Men only" bar, and another woman insists on being given a present on Father's Day, because the day has been liberated to include women. Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink and letratone, 265 x 323 mm on sheet 320 x 402 mm.

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Clark, Russell Stuart, 1905-1966 :Not the impression from reading the newspapers [195-?]

Date: 1950 - 1959

From: Clark, Russell Stuart, 1905-1966 :Cartoons on bureaucracy [1950s?]

By: Clark, Russell Stuart Cedric, 1905-1966; Wilson, George Hamish Ormond, 1907-1988

Reference: A-261-050

Description: Cartoon shows a man and his wife who wears an apron. The man is in an armchair, looking annoyed and worried as he reads the "Tory times" while his wife reads it over his shoulder. Possibly an original for a Listener cartoon Quantity: 1 drawing(s). Physical Description: Ink on paper 192 x 215 mm

Manuscript

Equality, a chapter from Three masquerades

Date: 1996

From: Waring, Marilyn Joy, 1952- : Collection

Reference: 2000-317-61

Description: Corrected typescript of chapter from `Three masquerades' (1996) Quantity: 1 folder(s).

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Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989:The concept of equality was 'contrary to the deeply hel...

Date: 1974

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

By: Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.); Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989

Reference: B-134-593

Description: This cartoon is a reaction to a submission to a parliamentary select committee asserting that many people disagree with gender equality. It shows a wife running around after her husband, a man bossing his wife and daughter, but the same man intimidated by his mother-in-law Extended Title - A man may feel more than equal to a wife - equal to a wife + daughter - but the same man can feel - he is not equal to ONE woman Inscriptions: Pencil dated lower right hand corner 23/5 Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink, letratone, newspaper clipping and crayon, 280 x 406 mm

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Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989 :Auckland, July 31 (PA) - Women themselves may have to ...

Date: 1972

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

By: Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.); Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989

Reference: B-134-289

Description: Shows a woman sitting in a chair reading a newspaper article about equality for women. Her husband is standing nearby. In the next scene, she is standing up and they are having a heated discussion about the article. In the last scene the man is sitting in a chair in front of the television and the woman has just come home from her "Women's Lib' meeting. Refers to a comment made by the Minister of Labour, Mr Thomson, that women will have to decide the extent to which they want to be equal. Extended Title - "That shouldn't be hard - I just want to stay equal to those people next door". "I consider women and men should be exactly equal, except in your case - I wouldn't want to devalue myself". "Our women's Lib meeting tonight couldn't decide how equal we wanted to be so we decided to float ourselves until we find our level" Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Black ink on paper, 230 x 320 mm Finding Aids: Photocopies available in Pictorial Reference Service.

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This healthy normal baby has a handicap; she was born female. She will be unequal ... u...

Date: 1976 - 1980

Reference: Eph-C-WOMEN-1970s-01

Description: Poster shows an illustration of a young girl toddler from the side / back. Quantity: 1 colour photo-mechanical print(s). Physical Description: Screenprint on poster 360 x 253 mm. Provenance: Acquired in 1982.

Manuscript

Papers

Date: 1987

From: University of Canterbury. Department of Education : Records of the first joint AARE/NZARE conference, Christchurch

Reference: 89-012-11

Description: Also includes `Metalinguistic skills and beginning reading' by William E Tunmer and Michael L Herriman; `The Development of children's cognition, oral language and reading; a five-year longitudinal study' by A J Watson, K C Sinclair, by G H Cooney and H W Marsh; `Teachers as researchers working towards equal opportunityeis in education from the inside' by Gaby Weiner; `Nurse educatiion in Western Australia, some historical perspectives' by Dr M A White; `In the national interest, but what of low achievers?' by C Williams; `Private schooling and public achievement' by Trevor Williams and Peter Carpenter; `Types of mathematics learners' by Khoon Yoong Wong; `Does "all students" include girls? Some reflections on recent educational policy, practice and theory' by Lyn Yates Quantity: 1 folder(s).

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Fletcher, David, 1952- :[15 cartoons published in New Zealand Truth and TV Extra betwee...

Date: 2001

By: Fletcher, David, 1952-; NZ Truth (Newspaper)

Reference: A-316-021/035

Description: Cartoons on New Zealand politics and politicians. Quantity: 15 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: 15 strip cartoons, ink and marker pens (colour), 125 x 394 mm.