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Conflict within the ICFTU: anti-communism and anti-colonialism in the 1950s

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Article

Carew, Anthony

International Review of Social History

1996

41

2

147-181

history ; ICFTU ; political ideology ; trade union ; TUC ; AFL-CIO

Trade unionism

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020859000113859

English

Bibliogr.

"Formed as an anti-communist labour international, the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) nevertheless experienced internal conflict over the appropriate approach to communism. The different perspectives of the two largest affiliates, the British TUC and the American AFL-CIO, caused disharmony and ultimately near organizational paralysis until it forced a change of leadership. Caught between these rival positions, the ICFTU secretariat's relations with the AFL-CIO were initially the most strained, but as the International extended its activity in Africa, in a bid to outflank communist organization among labour, relations with the TUC also deteriorated over the correct stance on nationalism and colonialism."

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