International Metalworkers' Federation
The International Metalworkers' Federation (IMF) was a global union federation of metalworkers' trade unions, founded in Zürich, Switzerland in August 1893. As of 2009, the IMF had more than 200 member organisations in 100 countries, representing a combined membership of 25 million workers.[1]
Full name | International Metalworkers' Federation |
---|---|
Founded | August 1893 |
Date dissolved | 2012 |
Merged into | IndustriALL Global Union |
Members | 25 million (2009) |
Affiliation | International Confederation of Free Trade Unions |
Key people | Jyrki Raina, General Secretary Berthold Huber, President |
Office location | Geneva, Switzerland |
Country | International |
Website | www |
History
The federation was founded as the International Metallurgists' Bureau of Information. In 1904, the International Secretariat of Foundry Workers merged into the federation, which renamed itself as the "International Metalworkers' Federation".[2] From 1921, its constitution called for not only international co-operation to improve wages and conditions, but also for workers to take over the means of production.[3]
Membership of the federation reached 1.9 million in 1930, but fell to only 190,000 in 1938, hit by the international depression. By 1947, membership had reached a new high of 2.7 million, and the federation took a leading role in opposing the World Federation of Trade Unions, instead becoming a founding constituent of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.[3]
The organization held a congress every four years, consisting of delegates from the member organisations. The congress established the broad lines of the IMF's policies and actions and elected the President and General Secretary of the IMF. Some member unions wished for the federation to hold sectoral conferences, and the IMF's refusal to do so led six unions to found the International Federation of Foundry Workers in 1949, but this was dissolved in 1954.[4][5]
The international headquarters of IMF was based in Geneva, Switzerland. There were regional offices in Johannesburg, New Delhi, Kuala Lumpur, Santiago, Mexico City, and a project office in Russia.
In June 2012, the IMF merged into the new global federation IndustriALL Global Union.
Leadership
General Secretaries
- 1893: Hermann Vogelsanger
- 1896: Charles Hobson
- 1904: Alexander Schlicke
- 1920: Konrad Ilg
- 1954: Adolphe Graedel
- 1971: Ivar Noren
- 1974: Herman Rebhan
- 1989: Marcello Malentacchi
- 2009: Jyrki Raina
Presidents
- 1960: Otto Brenner
- 1972: Hans Rasmussen
- 1974: Eugen Loderer
- 1984: Hans Mayr
- 1987: Franz Steinkühler
- 1993: Klaus Zwickel
- 2003: Jürgen Peters
- 2009: Berthold Huber
References
- "For a strong international labour movement". Retrieved 5 December 2009.
- Rütters, Peter (2001). International Trade Union Organisations (PDF). Bonn: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung. p. 18. ISBN 3898920453. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
- James C. Docherty and Sjaak van der Velden, Historical Dictionary of Organized Labor, p.146
- Fryth, H. J.; Collins, Henry (1950). The Foundry Workers. Manchester: Amalgamated Union of Foundry Workers.
- Mitchell, James P. (1959). The International Metalworkers Federation. Washington DC: US Department of Labor. pp. 15–19.
External links
- IMF official website
- Catalogue of the IMF British Section archives, held at the Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick