Italian Federation of Garment Workers
The Italian Federation of Garment Workers (Italian: Federazione Italiana Lavoratori dell'Abbigliamento, FILA) was a trade union representing workers involved in making clothing and footwear in Italy.
Until the 1920s, garment workers were organised in the Italian Federation of Clothing, but this was banned by the fascist government.[1] In 1947, workers decided to form a new union, the "Italian Federation of Garment Workers", which affiliated to the Italian General Confederation of Labour.[2] By 1954, the union had 86,837 members.[3]
In 1966, the union merged with the Italian Federation of Textile Workers, to form the Italian Federation of Textile and Garment Workers.[2][4]
General Secretaries
gollark: Why does it have *high* political freedom?
gollark: Oh, I have Fracto-China too, don't I?
gollark: For ethical reasons, children are produced centrally in vats.
gollark: Notelia is a very liberal nation. We have legalized arbitrary marriage digraphs, mandatory gun ownership, no prisons, no sports, cannabis, the metric system, no alcohol, and recreational nuclear weapons (also distributed to other nations at random).
gollark: HDMI is quite old but also ceased to exist for a while, TN16 is new.
References
- "ederazione Italiana Lavoratori Tessili Abbigliamento e Calzaturieri CGIL (PD)". Centro Luccini. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
- Gianfagna, Andrea (2020). Gli uomini e le donne della Cgil (PDF). CGIL. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
- Mitchell, James P. (1955). Directory of Labor Organizations: Europe. Washington DC: United States Department of Labor. p. 17.24.
- "CENTO ANNI DI STORIA". FILTEA. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
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