political propaganda cartoons

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8 results for the search “political propaganda cartoons” in vLex Canada

  • Legal Books and Journals

    University of New Brunswick Law Journal - Nbr. 56, January 2007

    Governing racist content on the Internet: national and international responses.

    ... (4) New methods of dissemination of anti-Semitic and revisionist propaganda about the Holocaust (including video games, ...... (6) But officially the use of electronic mail and the Internet was first observed as a growing trend amongst racist organizations to spread racist or xenophobic propaganda in 1996. (7) The United Nations Special ...

  • Legal Books and Journals

    University of Toronto Faculty of Law Review - Vol. 67 Nbr. 1, January 2009

    What is the purpose of freedom of expression?

    ... In turn, Maclean's and its supporters argued that the article was not hateful, that political speech must be protected in a democracy, and ...... the piece was a commentary on important global political issues. It was not in any sense Islamophobic, ...

  • Case Law

    Federal Court - June 04, 2008

    Zûndel, Re, 2005 FC 295 (2005)

    ... Zündel crossed the boundaries of free speech and pursuant to the Ministers' opinion, entered the realm of incitement to hatred and potential political violence in relation to the White Supremacist ...

  • News and Business

    Winnipeg Free Press - May 03, 2008

    China a Global Master at Controlling the Media

    After the unrest in Lhasa in March, China tightened control of the media in an attempt to cover the eyes of the world. Foreign journalists faced the tightest restrictions in recent times -- not only were requests to visit Tibet denied, strict controls were placed on visits to Tibetan areas of provinces such as Sichuan and Gansu. Two brave reporters -- Tim Johnson, chief reporter for McClatchy Newspapers in Beijing, and CBC's senior reporter in Beijing -- attempted to report from Gansu, but we...

  • News and Business

    Winnipeg Free Press - June 15, 2006

    Theatre / Arts

    Featuring 60 rides, including new rides the Crazy Mouse Coaster and Pharaoh's Fury, visit animals at the Lights Camera Animals Show, see the Iams Superdogs showcasing the exploits of the world's best known canine athletes and concerts featuring The Road Hammers at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow, Brent Butt at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Franklin the Turtle at 3:30 & 8:30 p.m. Sunday and Colin James at 8:30 p.m. Monday, Red River Exhibition Park; advance admission $5.50 at Sobey's and Mac's, $8 at the gate, ...

  • News and Business

    Winnipeg Free Press - April 04, 2009

    Snap Judgment

    Former Hudson's Bay Company archivist Anne Morton, who retired in 2006, worked with "Betty" for 25 years. Morton says it's hard to imagine the Archives of Manitoba without the dedicated, good-natured Blight. One family asked her to consider "snapshots" taken by a Winnipeg barber named Peter McAdam. "It was like Christmas when I opened these," she says, showing a charming photo of Winnipeggers on the lawn at Assiniboine Park in 1922. "He was a very gifted amateur photographer." "Oh, heavens, n...

  • News and Business

    Accounting Historians Journal, The - Vol. 32 Nbr. 2, December 2005

    Showing a Strong Front: Corporate Social Reporting and the 'Business Case' in Britain, 1914-1919

    It is generally asserted that corporate social reporting (CSR) is a phenomenon of the late 20th century. The present paper contests this view by looking at the ways in which British companies reacted to the challenges they faced during the First World War, when they were exposed to charges of profiteering, as well as to industrial unrest and high taxation. The paper considers the use of the speeches made by chairmen at annual general meetings to refute these charges and defend themselves. It ...

  • News and Business

    Accounting Historians Journal, The - Vol. 31 Nbr. 1, June 2004

    Political Suppression or Revenue Raising? Taxing Newspapers During the French Revolutionary War

    In 1797, the Prime Minister of Great Britain announced a substantial increase in the stamp duty on newspapers. This increase, and indeed the tax itself, has been variously represented as an attack on press freedom and an act of suppression of the working classes. This paper reconsiders these representations by reference to primary sources and concludes that the increases in stamp duty were part of a revenue raising exercise in which taxes on a number of luxury items were increased, including ...

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