Italian Federation of Chemical Workers

The Italian Federation of Chemical Workers (Italian: Federazione Italiana Lavoratori Chimici, FILC) was a trade union representing workers in the chemical industry in Italy.

The union was founded in 1901, as the Italian Chemical Workers' Federation, and was a founding affiliate of the General Confederation of Labour. It was banned by the fascist government in 1926, but re-established after World War II, when it affiliated to the recently formed Italian General Confederation of Labour.[1][2] By 1954, it had 123,286 members.[3]

In 1960, the union merged with the Italian Union of Oil Workers, to form the Italian Federation of Chemical and Oil Workers.[2]

General Secretaries

1945: Roberto Cuzzaniti[4]
1946: Italo Viglianesi[4]
1949: Eugenio Guidi[4]
1954: Luciano Lama[4]
gollark: There are several problems with what I have now: incorrect timings, meaning you sometimes dodge too late; the system not knowing your velocity due to the insane way MC handles this, making it impractical to determine what's going to hit you; the lack of any detection of obstacles meaning you could dodge into walls.
gollark: If I did, I would have implemented that, unless it was very hard.
gollark: I don't know how to.
gollark: osmarkslaserdodging™ isn't reliable.
gollark: Mostly I just die repeatedly.

References

  1. "Federazione italiana lavoratori chimici ed affini - FILCEA CGIL, 1901 -". SIUSA. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  2. "Federazione italiana lavoratori chimici ed affini - FILCEA CGIL, 1901 -". SIUSA. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  3. Mitchell, James P. (1955). Directory of Labor Organizations: Europe. Washington DC: United States Department of Labor. p. 17.24.
  4. Gianfagna, Andrea (2007). Gli uomini e le donne della Cgil (PDF). CGIL. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
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