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The Philippine Metalworkers' Alliance (PMA) is a trade union federation of metal workers in the Philippines. This includes workers in the automotive, electrical and electronics, iron, steel and shipbuilding sectors.
The workers were fired due to their union functions during negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement. Factory owners claimed the workers were fired after refusing to work on April 9, while workers said they had not been paid for two months. [2] IndustriALL and its affiliated unions in the Philippines condemned the dismissals.
Name est. Members (approx) Description Constitution Website National Education Association (NEA) : 1857 3,000,000+ Public school employees including but not limited to teachers, Education Support Professionals, cafeteria workers, bus drivers, guidance counselors, nurses, administrative assistants, secretaries, psychologists, and librarians.
By 1957 its headquarters were Janska 100, Prague 1, Czechoslovakia where it again shared the address with the TUIs of Transport Workers, Miners and Teachers [8] [9] By 1978 it moved to BP158 Moscow K9, Soviet Union, [10] an address it would keep until at least 1991.
The Sheet Metal Workers' International Association (SMWIA) was a trade union of skilled metal workers who perform architectural sheet metal work, fabricate and install heating and air conditioning work, shipbuilding, appliance construction, heater and boiler construction, precision and specialty parts manufacture, and a variety of other jobs involving sheet metal.
National Union of Mine and Metal Workers of the Mexican Republic; Society of Goldsmiths, Jewellers and Kindred Trades; South African Boilermakers' Society; South African Iron and Steel Trades Association; Steel and Engineering Workers' Union of Nigeria; Swedish Metalworkers' Union; Swiss Metalworkers' and Watchmakers' Union
The International Metalworkers' Federation (IMF) was a global union federation of metalworkers' trade unions, founded in Zürich, Switzerland in August 1893. As of 2009, [update] the IMF had more than 200 member organisations in 100 countries, representing a combined membership of 25 million workers.
The KMU is one of the two primary labor centers alongside the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines. [4] It is a social movement union closely linked with the broader national democratic movement in the Philippines. The organization brands its unionism as "genuine, militant, and nationalist." [3]