International Graphical Federation
The International Graphical Federation (IGF) was a global union federation bringing together unions of printing workers around the world.
Native name | Fédération graphique internationale |
---|---|
Founded | 13 May 1949 |
Date dissolved | 31 December 1999 |
Merged into | Union Network International |
Members | 1.2 million (1994)[1] |
Journal | Journal of the International Graphical Federation |
Affiliation | ICFTU |
Office location | Monbijoustrasse 73, Bern, Switzerland |
History
Moved to establish the federation began in 1939, when the Lithographers' International, International Typographers' Secretariat, and International Federation of Bookbinders and Kindred Trades, agreed to merge.[2] However, due to World War II, no progress was made until 1946, when the British Printing and Kindred Trades Federation established a committee which drafted a constitution for a merged organisation.[3]
The federation was established at its first meeting, in Stockholm in 1949. It agreed to operate on a non-political basis, instead focusing on responses to technical developments in the industry, and sharing information on industrial disputes, employment and health and safety standards in each country.[3]
The federation had three boards, covering typography, lithography and bookbinding, and each agreed policies which were put to the body's congress. An executive committee with fifteen members co-ordinated the federation's activities, while a bureau of the general secretary, president, and four representatives of the country in which the headquarters were located, ran the organisation between executive committee meetings.[3]
The IGF affiliated to the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), but suspended its membership in 1967 in protest at the French Federation of Book Workers, communist union from France being permitted to affiliate to the ICFTU.[4][5]
At the end of 1999, the federation merged with the Communications International, the International Federation of Employees, Technicians and Managers, and the Media and Entertainment International, to form Union Network International.[6]
Affiliates
In 1979, the following unions were affiliated to the federation:[7]
Union | Country | Affiliated membership |
---|---|---|
Union of Printing and Paper | Austria | 24,272 |
Paper and Publishing Industry Union | Belgium | 15,219 |
Sindicato de Artes Graficas de Bogota | Colombia | 101 |
Cyprus Industrial and Hotel Employees' Federation | Cyprus | 380 |
Danish Typographical Union | Denmark | 11,387 |
Danish Bookbinders' Union | Denmark | 8,951 |
Danish Lithographers' Union | Denmark | 2,742 |
Finnish Printers' and Bookbinders' Union | Finland | 23,454 |
French Federation of Book Workers | France | 60,402 |
Printing and Paper Union | West Germany | 158,180 |
National Graphical Association | United Kingdom | 107,723 |
Society of Graphical and Allied Trades | United Kingdom | 133,500 |
Society of Lithographic Artists, Designers, Engravers and Process Workers | United Kingdom | 21,261 |
National Union of Wallcoverings, Decorative and Allied Trades | United Kingdom | 3,369 |
Printing and Allied Workers' Union | Guyana | 500 |
Hid Islenzka Prentarafelag | Iceland | 409 |
Grafiska Sveinafelagid | Iceland | 89 |
Indian Federation of Graphical Workers | India | 1,314 |
Press Mazdoor Sabha | India | 1,550 |
Irish Graphical Society | Ireland | 1,524 |
National Union of Printing Workers in Israel | Israel | 3,960 |
Federazione Italiana Lavoratori del Libro | Italy | 28,000 |
Printers' and Bookbinders' Union in the Lebanese Republic | Lebanon | 600 |
Fédération Luxembourgeoise des Travailleurs du Liver | Luxembourg | 609 |
Mauritius Printing Workers' Union | Mauritius | 104 |
Norwegian Graphical Union | Norway | 14,123 |
Typographical Union of Rhodesia | Rhodesia | 1,968 |
South African Typographical Union | South Africa | 19,928 |
Swedish Graphic Workers' Union | Sweden | 39,472 |
Schweizerischer Typographenbund | Switzerland | 15,316 |
Schweizerischer Buchbinder und Kartonagerverband | Switzerland | 3,324 |
Schwiezerischer Lithographenbund | Switzerland | 6,279 |
Press Workers' Union of Turkey | Turkey | 4,497 |
Union of Commercial and Industrial Workers | Trinidad and Tobago | 396 |
Graphic Arts International Union | United States | 91,394 |
Leadership
Secretaries
- 1949: Charles Woerler
- 1964: Heinz Göke
- 1981: Alfred Kaufmann
- 1990: Bob Tomlins
- 1994: Chris Pate
- 1997: Olav Boye
Chairs
- 1949: Adolf Schäfer[8]
- 1955: Franz Segessenmann[8]
- 1958: Ernest Leuenberger
- 1967: John Bonfield
- 1976: Leonhard Mahlein
- 1983: Erwin Ferlemann
- 1994: Rene van Tilborg
References
- Docherty, James C.; van der Velden, Sjaak (2012). Historical Dictionary of Organized Labor. Scarecrow Press. p. 143. ISBN 978-0810879881.
- "International Graphical Federation (IGF)". Open Yearbook. UIA. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
- Bain, Peter; Gennard, John (2005). A History of the Society of Graphical and Allied Trades. Routledge. pp. 269–270. ISBN 1134790902.
- "International Graphical Federation Archives". Archives Portal Europe. International Institute of Social History. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
- Windmuller, John (1979). The Shape of Transnational Unionism: International Trade Secretariats. United States Bureau of International Labor Affairs. p. 41.
- "FAQs". UNI Global Union. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
- Coldrick, Percy; Jones, Philip (1979). The International Directory of the Trade Union Movement. New York: Facts on File. pp. 66–70. ISBN 0871963744.
- Bundock, Clement (1959). The Story of the National Union of Printing, Bookbinding and Paper Workers. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 556.