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Looking north over the Michigan Avenue (DuSable) Bridge. Most consulates are on or near Michigan Avenue in the central sections of Chicago. This is a list of diplomatic missions and trade organizations in Chicago. Many governments and organizations have established diplomatic and trade representation in Chicago, Illinois. [1]
The Italian Trade Agency (also ITA, in Italian: Agenzia ICE) is a government agency of the Italian Republic whose purpose is to promote foreign trade and Italy's exports. It was established in 1926 with the Decreto reale n. 800 with the name of INE (Istituto nazionale per le esportazioni, "National Institute for Exports") and had the main task of "promoting the development of exports of ...
Ministry for Agriculture, Industry and Trade (1861-1877, 1878-1916) Ministry for Industry, Trade and Labour (1916-1920, 1943-1945) Ministry of Industry and Trade (1920-1923) Ministry of National Economy (1923-1929) Ministry of Corporations (1929-1943) Ministry of Industry and Trade Ministry of Labour and Social Security (1945-1946)
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Italy, excluding honorary consulates.Italy has a large global network of diplomatic missions. It is the only country in the world [citation needed] to have an embassy on its own territory—the Italian embassy to the Holy See is in Rome.
An Italian passport. Visa requirements for Italian citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of Italy. As of 2024, Italian citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 192 countries and territories, ranking the Italian passport 2nd in the world according to the Henley Passport ...
The Italian General Confederation of Labour (Italian: Confederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro, pronounced [koɱfederatˈtsjoːne dʒeneˈraːle itaˈljaːna del laˈvoːro]; CGIL [tʃiddʒiˈɛlle] [tʃidˌdʒi.iˈɛlle]) is a national trade union centre in Italy.
The organization was founded in 1895 by Sicilian immigrants in Chicago. The name was changed to the Italian-American National Union in 1925 in order to attract Italian-Americans from other regions. [1] The Union was paying out sick benefits and death benefits and had deposited $100,000 with the Illinois Department of Insurance. [2]
Mistry, Kaeten. "The case for political warfare: Strategy, organization and US involvement in the 1948 Italian election." Cold War History 6.3 (2006): 301–329. Mistry, Kaeten. "Re-thinking American intervention in the 1948 Italian election: beyond a success–failure dichotomy." Modern Italy 16.2 (2011): 179–194. Pells, Richard.