National Federation of Italian Agricultural Labourers and Employees explained

The National Federation of Italian Agricultural Labourers and Employees (Italian: Federazione Nazionale Braccianti e Salariati Agricoli, Federbraccianti) was a trade union representing agricultural workers in Italy.

The union was founded in 1948, as a split from the National Federation of Agricultural Workers.[1] It affiliated to the Italian General Confederation of Labour, and internationally, to the Trade Union International of Agricultural, Forestry and Plantation Workers, in which it provided much of the leadership.[2] By 1954, it claimed 1,084,116 members.[3]

The union campaigned with other organisations for improved pay and working conditions, and in the 1970s it achieved equalisation of welfare and social security with industrial workers, and for workers not to be laid off without just cause.[4]

Employment in the sector gradually declined, and by 1987, it had only 348,621 members. In 1988, it merged with the Italian Federation of Sugar, Food Industry and Tobacco Workers, to form the Italian Federation of Agroindustrial Workers.[5]

General Secretaries

1948: Luciano Romagnoli[6]

1960: Giuseppe Caleffi

1973: Feliciano Rossitto

1977: Donatella Turtura

1980: Andrea Gianfagna

1986: Angelo Lana

References

  1. Web site: Confedertèrra . Sapere . 23 July 2020.
  2. [Percy Coldrick|Coldrick, Percy]
  3. Book: Mitchell . James P. . Directory of Labor Organizations: Europe . 1955 . United States Department of Labor . Washington DC . 17.24.
  4. Web site: Federbraccianti . Sapere . 23 July 2020.
  5. Book: Ebbinghaus . Bernhard . Visser . Jelle . Trade Unions in Western Europe Since 1945 . 2000 . Palgrave Macmillan . Basingstoke . 0333771125 . 402 - 404.
  6. Book: Gianfagna . Andrea . Gli uomini e le donne della Cgil . 2020 . CGIL . 22 July 2020.