Industrial Union of Metal

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Industrial_Union_of_Metal an entity of type: Thing

Die Industriegewerkschaft Metall (IG Metall) war die größte Einzelgewerkschaft im Freien Deutschen Gewerkschaftsbund (FDGB) der DDR. Die IG war Mitglied der Internationalen Vereinigung der Gewerkschaften der Werktätigen der Metallindustrie (IVG Metall) im Weltgewerkschaftsbund. rdf:langString
The Industrial Union of Metal (German: Industriegewerkschaft Metall, IG Metall) was a trade union representing workers in the metal and electronic industries in East Germany. The union was founded on 13 June 1946, in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany. By the end of the month, it had 421,558 members, making it the largest component of the new Free German Trade Union Federation (FDGB). In 1951, metallurgical workers were moved into a new Industrial Union of Metallurgy, but in 1958 they returned. In recognition of this, the union was renamed the Industrial Union of Metal and Metallurgy, but the following year, it returned to its former, shorter, name. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Industrial Union of Metal
rdf:langString Industriegewerkschaft Metall (DDR)
xsd:integer 64486142
xsd:integer 1024343602
rdf:langString Die Industriegewerkschaft Metall (IG Metall) war die größte Einzelgewerkschaft im Freien Deutschen Gewerkschaftsbund (FDGB) der DDR. Die IG war Mitglied der Internationalen Vereinigung der Gewerkschaften der Werktätigen der Metallindustrie (IVG Metall) im Weltgewerkschaftsbund.
rdf:langString The Industrial Union of Metal (German: Industriegewerkschaft Metall, IG Metall) was a trade union representing workers in the metal and electronic industries in East Germany. The union was founded on 13 June 1946, in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany. By the end of the month, it had 421,558 members, making it the largest component of the new Free German Trade Union Federation (FDGB). In 1951, metallurgical workers were moved into a new Industrial Union of Metallurgy, but in 1958 they returned. In recognition of this, the union was renamed the Industrial Union of Metal and Metallurgy, but the following year, it returned to its former, shorter, name. Internationally, the union was an affiliate of the Trade Union International of Workers in the Metal Industry. The union was also involved in sports associations, initially called SV Mechanik, and later, SV Motor, as seen in SV Motor Altenburg. The union continued to grow, and by January 1989, it had 1,819,356 members, 18.9% of all FDGB members. In December 1989, it signed a co-operation agreement with the West German IG Metall, and in April 1990, it became an independent union. However, in May, the West German union's attitude changed, and it decided instead to set up its own branches in East Germany. As a result, at the end of the year, the East German union dissolved, asking its members to join the West German union as individuals, about 900,000 doing so.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2272

data from the linked data cloud