Federation of Entertainment Unions explained

Federation of Entertainment Unions
Founded:1968
Members:6 unions (2016)
130,000 workers (2017)
Location Country:United Kingdom
Headquarters:Guild House, Upper St Martins Lane, London

The Federation of Entertainment Unions (FEU) is a joint representative body based in the United Kingdom, representing workers in TV, theatre, film, music, gaming, cinema, publishing, new media, professional football and other performing arts.

The body was established in 1968 as the Confederation of Entertainment Unions.[1] In 1991, two of its larger members merged to form the Broadcasting, Entertainment, Cinematograph and Theatre Union (BECTU), and it was reconstituted under its current name.[2]

As of 2017, FEU comprises what is now the BECTU section of Prospect along with, Equity, the Musicians Union, the National Union of Journalists, the Professional Footballers' Association, Unite and the Writers' Guild of Great Britain[3] - around 130,000 members in total are in the relevant sections of these unions.

The FEU takes up issues that are of common interest among these unions, providing joint responses to policy consultations, offering jointly-managed training and campaigning services for members of those unions.

Presidents

1968: George Elvin

1970: Alan Sapper

1991: Position abolished

References

  1. "Entertainment unions form confederation", The Guardian, 6 September 1968
  2. Barrie MacDonald (1993), Broadcasting in the United Kingdom: A Guide to Information Sources, p.138
  3. [Trades Union Congress]

External links