Textile and Clothing Workers' Union explained

The Textile and Clothing Workers' Union (Finnish: Tekstiili- ja vaatetustyöväen liitto, Teva) was a trade union representing workers involved in making textiles in Finland.

History

The union was founded in 1971, when the Textile Workers' Union merged with the Textile and Knitting Workers' Union and the Union of Clothing Workers. These unions had been members of separate federations, but they had all joined the Central Organisation of Finnish Trade Unions in 1969, prompting the merger.[1] [2]

The union's membership initially increased, peaking at 48,254 in 1980. Employment in the industry then declined rapidly, and despite the small Finnish Textile Mechanics' Union merged into Teva in 1989, by 1998, it had only 18,829 members. In 2004, it merged into the Chemical Union.[3]

Presidents

1970: Väinö Kujanpää

1974: Seppo Niemi

1986: Tuulikki Kannisto

1991: Pirkko Oksa

References

  1. Book: Kaarninen . Mervi . Taitavien käsien liitto : Tekstiili- ja vaatetustyöväen liitto Teva 1970–2004 . 2005 . Kemianliitto . Helsinki . 9519513353.
  2. Book: Ebbinghaus . Bernhard . Visser . Jelle . Trade Unions in Western Europe Since 1945 . 2000 . Palgrave Macmillan . Basingstoke . 0333771125 . 219.
  3. Web site: LIITTOFUUSIOT . Tyovaenliike . 5 March 2020.