File:Hazel hawke.jpg

Licensing
Image source page, copyright held by the National Archives of Australia of Australia. The library permits use for non-commercial educational purposes:

Copyright to material hosted on the Parliamentary Education Office Website is vested in the Commonwealth of Australia, unless specifically notified to the contrary, and is intended for your general use and information. You may download, store in cache, display, print and copy the information in unaltered form only (retaining this notice).

Australian fair dealing law (similar in many respects to fair use in the United States) permits the use of images for:


 * Research and Study
 * Review and Criticism
 * 'Reporting the News'
 * Legal advice

Use of this image on Wikipedia qualifies in the preceding two of these categories. In addition, please view the fair use rationale below.

Fair Use for Hazel Hawke
The image here is claimed to be fair use as it is:


 * 1) A portrait of one of Australia's most famous politicians' wives;
 * 2) There are no copyleft alternatives of such a photo;
 * 3) The image used is of a ceremonial and not a commercial value;
 * 4) The article is greatly improved by the prominence of this photo;
 * 5) Which is hosted and displayed on the not-for-profit Wikipedia Encyclopedia for educational purposes.

Fair Use rationale for The Lodge
The image here is claimed to be fair use as it is:


 * 1) There are no copyleft alternatives of such a photo;
 * 2) The image used is of a ceremonial and not a commercial value;
 * 3) The article is greatly improved by the prominence of this photo;
 * 4) Which is hosted and displayed on the not-for-profit Wikipedia Encyclopedia for educational purposes.
 * 5) The image is of small resolution;
 * 6) The image represents the Lodge at a particular time in its history representing the restorations undertaken by Bob and Hazel Hawke and has been placed in the discussion of the different interior design styles of the Lodge at different stages in its history. While text only could be used to represent this an image showing one of the styles (but not all of them) is a much better representation and improvement to the article than nothing at all. The Lodge has also undergone extensive modifications since and the image as it stands could not be reproduced. Additionally, Hazel Hawke has aged significantly and now has advanced dementia, and could not be available to reproduce this photograph- it can be considered a non-reproducible event;
 * 7) The image refers to the Australian-made original Beale piano in the Lodge. Hazel Hawke was instrumental in finding and restoring this item so a contemporaneous photo of Hazel is much better than a photo of the piano by itself;
 * 8) Even if it could be argued that an image of the piano itself would be a better alternative, the Lodge is not accessible at all to the general public and no photograph of the piano can be taken.
 * 9) While not free use, the National Archives of Australia permits unlimited usage if the purpose is non-commercial. Even commercial usage will not financially disadvantage the Government of Australia because the image is publicly available and used in the country's archive collection.