Some features of our website won't work with Internet Explorer. Improve your experience by using a more up-to-date browser like Chrome, Firefox, or Edge.
Skip to content

Places

Filter your search

Date

Back Filter by Reset

Date

Places related to your search results. This map shows just part of our unpublished collections – there's more coming as we add location information to records. Learn how to use the map.

We can connect 51 things related to China, New Zealand, TAPUHI, true, and 2000 to the places on this map.
Online Image

Brockie, Robert Ellison 1932-:NZ Ratifies Kyoto emissions protocols. National Business ...

Date: 2001

From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons

Reference: DX-003-042

Description: Shows the legs of the big boys on the international stage, US, Australia, India and China with NZ only reaching their ankles in relative size. NZ is committing suicide on it's sword by ratifying the Kyoto Protocol on carbon emmisions while the big 4 are holding back. Extended Title - US. AUSTRALIA. INDIA. CHINA. NZ. '...we lead by example' Quantity: 1 digital image(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"This report on your abuse of travel perks is out - it says the infringements are only ...

Date: 2010

From: Fletcher, David, 1952- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0016270

Description: 'The Politician' cartoon strip. The minister's aide tells him that the report on his travel perk infringements is out and his offending was only minor. The minister wishes he had infringed rather more since he may have got away with it. This refers to the Pansy Wong affair. Minister of Women's Affairs Pansy Wong resigned from her portfolio after it was revealed that on a trip to China in 2008 her husband Sammy Wong was involved in a business deal. An independent investigation of travel claims by Mrs Wong and her husband Sammy was ordered by Speaker Lockwood Smith. The trip was made with a 90 percent taxpayer-funded rebate on their airfares, and it is against the rules to use the allowance for private business. Mrs Wong has apologised and paid back the $474 rebate for the China trip. An Auditor-General's inquiry called for by the Labour opposition is not considered necessary. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :Building a bridge. Otago Daily Times, 31 May 2005.

Date: 2005

From: Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times]

Reference: DX-022-262

Description: Shows New Zealand Prime Minister, Helen Clark, dressed in overalls and with a hammer in her hand building a bridge between New Zealand and China. In the gap between the two countries which are depicted as cliffs, with the name, 'China' on the left and 'New Zealand' on the right are a great many prisoners, some in chains, some holding tools. The phrase 'prison labour' appears beneath them. Refers to Helen Clark's visit to China looking for an early agreement on a comprehensive free trade agreement (FTA) but China's civil rights abuses could create complications. Quantity: 1 digital image(s) ..

Add to cart
Online Image

Brockie, Robert Ellison 1932- :'Y'all comin' with me to nail this varmit?' National Bus...

Date: 2002

From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons

Reference: DX-003-072

Description: American President George W Bush sits on his horse with Saddam Hussein in his rifle sites. His cowboy friends show no interest in joining him in the hunt for Saddam. Other Titles - 'Er..I'm washing my hair tonight' NZ; 'Um...' China; ''Erm...' Europe; 'Er...' Russia;'Um...' Extended Title - Blazing Saddles. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :"Right-wing resistance rules! Ok!" 13 May 2011

Date: 2011

From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons

By: National Business Review (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0017799

Description: In the left frame a new-right skin-head wearing a shirt emblazoned with a swastika and printed with the letters 'NF' (National Front) carries a flag bearing the words 'Fight Asian invasion!' He growls 'Right-wing resistance rules! OK!' In the second frame he is shown as a tiny insignificant man who is about to be crushed like an insect beneath the boot of 'China'. Context - 'A Right-Wing Resistance group has been circulating anti-Asian fliers throughout Christchurch and is causing anger within the community. We've had in past election years quite a campaign against Asians and given the arrival of Asians, particularly Chinese and Massey University sociologist Paul Spoonley thinks its a publicity stunt attempting to guage the amount of interest in the formation of an anti-Asian Party. (3 News 12 May 2011) The cartoon suggests that China is so enormous and developing so rapidly that any protest by these people is really pretty pointless and rather pathetic. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"Another commercial decision." 13 December 2010

Date: 2010

From: Hawkey, Allan Charles, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Waikato Times].

Reference: DCDL-0016346

Description: A man holds an ANZAC poppy and thinks sardonically that this is 'another commercial decision'. Arrows indicating 'made in China' point to all the different parts of his clothing and his glasses. Context; the controversial decision to have the poppies made in China. The Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association has said that Australian company Cash's had won the tender to make the poppies from 2012. The parts for 1.2 million poppies a year will be made in China and then assembled by workers across the ditch. The move has outraged Christchurch RSA, which has held the contract since 1931, first employing war veterans and later people with disabilities. (Stuff 10 December 2010) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Nisbet, Al, 1958- :China. NZ. Christchurch Press, ca. 6 September, 2002.

Date: 2002

From: Nisbet, Alastair, 1958- :Digital cartoons

By: Press (Christchurch, N.Z.)

Reference: DX-006-078

Description: The New Zealand Basketball team, the Tall Blacks, have defeated China at the recent World Basketball Championships where they reached the top 4. The Tall Blacks are a non-professional team while the rest of the teams were professional. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"Amazing! It's so like the real thing! Right down to the 'Made in China' label!" 27 Dec...

Date: 2010

From: Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times]

Reference: DCDL-0016424

Description: A father is delighted with his small son's Christmas present which is a railway set. As they admire it under the Christmas tree the father says 'Amazing! It's so like the real thing! Right down to the "Made in China" label!' May refer to the mislabelling of Chinese goods making it look as though they are made in New Zealand or just an expectation that everything consumable comes from China. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

CHINA. No trespassing dogs shot! "It's okay... He's under control! Heel boy!" FTA. 11 J...

Date: 2010

From: Nisbet, Alastair, 1958- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0014792

Description: Shows Prime Minister John Key hanging onto the neck by a doglead of an enormous dragon which represents China. John Key assures the farmer threatening to shoot the dragon that he has it under control. Refers to Natural Dairy (NZ) Holdings Ltd, a Chinese company that wants to buy farms in New Zealand, [and that] has lodged an application with foreign investment regulators for approval to buy properties known as the Crafar farms. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

The Clinton-Key Encounter and The Elephant in the Room. 5 November 2010

Date: 2010

From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0015989

Description: Prime Minister John Key and American Secretary of State Hilary Clinton sit facing one another across a table as an enormous dragon representing China rears up behind them. The title reads 'The Clinton-Key encounter and the elephant in the room'. The encounter took place when Hilary Clinton visited New Zealand in early November; the two signed the 'Wellington Declaration that 'formalises a new strategic partnership between the two countries, commits to regular meetings at foreign minister level, working together on trade and holding annual military talks'. Refers on the one hand to the free trade deals that are so important to New Zealand and that, thanks to a trading partnership signed in 2008, means that New Zealand now sells to China in seven hours what it used to sell in all of 1972. Refers on the other hand to the sovereignty disputes over the Spratly and Paracel island chains, which are potentially rich in natural resources, have pitted China against some of its neighbors, including Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines. Clinton said the United States and every other nation "has a national interest in freedom of navigation, open access to Asia's maritime commons, and respect for international law in the South China Sea," which contains some of the busiest commercial sea lanes in the world and so she says the Obama administration wants claimants to pursue their disputes in accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea rather than through coercion. (America.gov - 23 July 2010) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"Look, I'm relaxed about it.. There are two sides to this..." 20 December 2010

Date: 2010

From: Hubbard, James, 1949-: Digital caricatures and cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0016414

Description: Prime Minister John Key, facing in two directions at once, paddles along a shoreline wearing a gaudy summer shirt and shorts; looking in one direction he says 'Look, I'm relaxed about it..' and looking in the other he says 'There are two sides to this...' He holds a newspaper with a headline reading 'Cables expose Key over Dalai Lama contradictions'. Refers to news that the NZ Herald has revealed a leaked US Embassy cable that said Key had assured the Chinese premier he would not meet the Dalai Lama. But Key promised voters he would meet him. Foreign Minister Murray McCully insists there was no "official" instruction to senior politicians to avoid meeting the Dalai Lama. Key decided himself to dodge a meeting - and his Cabinet ministers made the same decision, all at the same time, all by themselves. Refers to the Dalai Lama's visit to New Zealand last December 2009. (NZ Herald 26 December 2010) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"What's that rumbling noise?" "It's our boys turning in their graves!" 10 December 2010

Date: 2010

From: Hodgson, Trace, 1958- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0016318

Description: Two old soldiers walk in a soldiers' cemetery and the sight of ANZAC Day poppies 'made in China' makes them realise that the rumbling noise they hear is 'our boys turning in their graves'. The Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association has reported that Australian company Cash's had won the tender to make the poppies from 2012. The parts for 1.2 million poppies a year will be made in China and then assembled by workers across the ditch. The move has outraged Christchurch RSA, which has held the contract since 1931, first employing war veterans and later people with disabilities. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"I hope it's ONLY their Anzac Day poppies they don't want made in China." 18 December 2010

Date: 2010

From: Clark, Laurence, 1949- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0016396

Description: Santa Claus peers into a huge sack of Christmas presents and says 'I hope it's ONLY their ANZAC poppies they don't want made in China. Context - the suggestion that many of the Christmas gifts will be made in China and cause similar outrage to that caused by the decision to take the making of ANZAC poppies offshore. The Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association said yesterday that Australian company Cash's had won the tender to make the poppies from 2012. The parts for 1.2 million poppies a year will be made in China and then assembled by workers across the ditch. The move has outraged Christchurch RSA, which has held the contract since 1931, first employing war veterans and later people with disabilities. (Stuff 10 December 2010) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

US. India. China. Russia. ETS (NZ). 1 July 2010

Date: 2010

From: Nisbet, Alastair, 1958- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0014728

Description: The cartoon shows vaste chimneys gushing carbon emissions into the atmosphere from the United States, India, China and Russia. A much smaller one in New Zealand is plugged with an ETS cork but still emissions manage to escape. On this day 1st July 2010 New Zealand started its ETS. There is debate about how effectively the scheme will be in the cutting of emissions. The other four large countries in the cartoon do not yet have schemes in place. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

ANZAC poppies to be made overseas, will cost NZ jobs - China dole. 12 December 2010

Date: 2010

From: Winter, Mark, 1958- : Digital cartoons published in the Southland Times and other papers

Reference: DCDL-0016325

Description: Text reads 'ANZAC poppies to be made overseas will cost NZ jobs'. The cartoon shows a traditional fabric ANZAC Day poppy labelled 'New Zealand Bigger Returns Services Association'; the words 'CHINA DOLE' (wordplay on China doll) appear beside the poppy. Context; the Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association said yesterday that Australian company Cash's had won the tender to make the poppies from 2012. The parts for 1.2 million poppies a year will be made in China and then assembled by workers across the ditch. The move has outraged Christchurch RSA, which has held the contract since 1931, first employing war veterans and later people with disabilities. (Stuff 10 December 2010) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"The opposition say your report will be a total whitewash!" "HOW DARE THEY?!!" 7 Decemb...

Date: 2010

From: Fletcher, David, 1952- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0016272

Description: 'The Politician' cartoon strip. The minister's aide tells him that the opposition says his report will be a total whitewash. The minister, who is dressed in painting clothes and who carries a bucket of white paint, is outraged at the suggestion. Probably refers to the Pansy Wong affair. Minister of Women's Affairs Pansy Wong resigned from her portfolio after it was revealed that on a trip to China in 2008 her husband Sammy Wong was involved in a business deal. An independent investigation of travel claims by Mrs Wong and her husband Sammy was ordered by Speaker Lockwood Smith. The trip was made with a 90 percent taxpayer-funded rebate on their airfares, and it is against the rules to use the allowance for private business. Mrs Wong has apologised and paid back the $474 rebate for the China trip. An Auditor-General's inquiry called for by the Labour opposition is not considered necessary. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Govt looking to swap two pandas for two kiwis... "And the Chinese get Chris Carter and ...

Date: 2010

From: Nisbet, Alastair, 1958- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0015396

Description: Prime Minister John Key and opposition Labour leader Phil Goff shake hands gleefully as they walk away with two pandas which have been acquired as a swap with the Chinese for two 'kiwis' Labour Chris Carter and Maori Party Hone Harawira. Officials have held talks on bringing a pair of Chinese pandas to New Zealand but early results are unlikely, Prime Minister John Key says.Now representatives from the Foreign Affairs Ministry, Environmental Risk Management Authority, the Agriculture and Forestry Ministry's biosecurity division, as well as others from the Internal Affairs Department and Foreign Affairs and Trade Ministry are considering requirements. Chris Carter and Hone Harawira have both been embarrassments to their parties, Labour and Maori, in one way or another Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"Seems that irritating noise is everywhere lately." 21 June 2010

Date: 2010

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

Reference: DCDL-0014994

Description: Shows Green Co-leader Russel Norman standing on the steps of parliament blowing on a South African vuvuzela from which dangles a banner reading 'Free speech'. A Chinese diplomat at the bottom of his steps comments to a colleague that it seems 'that irritating noise is everywhere lately.' The vuvuzela was very evident during the Fifa World Cup in South Africa - it's a strident horn that everyone blew all the time. The Chinese and Russel Norman refer to an incident during a visit to New Zealand by a Chinese delegation when Russel Norman protested about China's treatment of Tibet and as a result was roughed up by Chinese security guards. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"Y'know, I wouldn't be upset if we had an invasion of English HERE!" 21 March 2010

Date: 2010

From: Hubbard, James, 1949-: Digital caricatures and cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0013968

Description: Two middle aged men walk past a news agent's that has a billboard reading 'Invasion of English language upsets Chinese'. A group of teenagers pass by talking together in what seems like a foreign language to the men, one of whom comments that he wouldn't be upset if they had an English invasion here. Refers to news that an alarm bell has been sounded by such eminent scholars as Professor To Cho-yee of Hong Kong, who argues that the widespread study of English is a waste of valuable resources to the detriment of the study of Mandarin (cf. Shanghai Star 10-24-02, "English Dominance"). Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Hawkey, Allan Charles, 1941- :'I'm going to report you to the Shanghai authorities.' 'A...

Date: 2004

From: Hawkey, Allan Charles, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Waikato Times].

Reference: DX-014-510

Description: A tourist in a Chinese city comes across some bogus fruit at the market. There has long been concern over the counterfeiting of New Zealand labels on fruit in China. Extended Title - Best Produce in Shanghai. Fruit and Vege from New Zealand. Fake NZ labels on fruit in China.. News. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).

Add to cart
Back to top