Knowledge

General Diamond Workers' Association of Belgium

Source 📝

58:, although almost all of its leading members were active in the party. A group of members who wanted to work closely with the party split away in 1911, but after Louis Van Berckelaer was elected as leader of the ADB in 1912, he reunified the groups. 69:. The union gradually expanded into unionising diamond workers in the countryside, and in 1929 it set up De Daad, the most modern diamond cutting factory in Belgium at the time. 85: 168: 76:. After the war, the industry entered a gradual decline, and the union focused on maintaining pay and conditions. It affiliated to the 178: 163: 173: 62: 77: 80:, and membership peaked in 1955 at 12,304, then declined to only 2,694 by 1992. At the start of 1994, it merged with the 158: 81: 54:. It rapidly became one of the leading trade unions in the city. Unlike many unions, it did not affiliate to the 66: 89: 55: 114:"ALGEMENE DIAMANTBEWERKERSBOND VAN BELGIË / SYNDICAT DES OUVRIERS DIAMANTAIRES (1918-1994)" 8: 32: 24: 152: 73: 40: 142:. Washington DC: United States Department of Labour. pp. 3.1–3.7. 113: 44: 86:
Union of Clothing Workers and Kindred Trades in Belgium
72:
Many union members were Jewish and were killed during
65:
in 1905, and shared its headquarters with this small
140:
Directory of International Trade Union Organizations
150: 50:The union was founded on 19 August 1895, as the 21:General Diamond Workers' Association of Belgium 43:representing workers in the diamond trade in 137: 29:Algemene Diamantbewerkersbond van België 131: 151: 108: 106: 104: 63:Universal Alliance of Diamond Workers 78:General Federation of Belgian Labour 52:Antwerp Diamond Workers' Association 169:Trade unions disestablished in 1994 101: 13: 37:Syndicat des Ouvriers Diamantaires 14: 190: 179:1994 disestablishments in Belgium 164:Trade unions established in 1895 82:Union of Belgian Textile Workers 67:international trade secretariat 174:1895 establishments in Belgium 90:Textile-Clothing-Diamond Union 1: 95: 7: 10: 195: 138:Goldberg, Arthur (1960). 159:Trade unions in Belgium 36: 28: 16:Trade union in Belgium 61:The union set up the 56:Belgian Workers Party 186: 144: 143: 135: 129: 128: 126: 124: 110: 194: 193: 189: 188: 187: 185: 184: 183: 149: 148: 147: 136: 132: 122: 120: 112: 111: 102: 98: 17: 12: 11: 5: 192: 182: 181: 176: 171: 166: 161: 146: 145: 130: 99: 97: 94: 88:, to form the 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 191: 180: 177: 175: 172: 170: 167: 165: 162: 160: 157: 156: 154: 141: 134: 119: 115: 109: 107: 105: 100: 93: 91: 87: 83: 79: 75: 70: 68: 64: 59: 57: 53: 48: 46: 42: 38: 34: 30: 26: 22: 139: 133: 121:. Retrieved 117: 74:World War II 71: 60: 51: 49: 20: 18: 41:trade union 153:Categories 123:22 January 96:References 84:and the 39:) was a 45:Belgium 31:, ADB; 33:French 25:Dutch 125:2020 118:ODIS 19:The 155:: 116:. 103:^ 92:. 47:. 35:: 27:: 127:. 23:(

Index

Dutch
French
trade union
Belgium
Belgian Workers Party
Universal Alliance of Diamond Workers
international trade secretariat
World War II
General Federation of Belgian Labour
Union of Belgian Textile Workers
Union of Clothing Workers and Kindred Trades in Belgium
Textile-Clothing-Diamond Union



"ALGEMENE DIAMANTBEWERKERSBOND VAN BELGIË / SYNDICAT DES OUVRIERS DIAMANTAIRES (1918-1994)"
Categories
Trade unions in Belgium
Trade unions established in 1895
Trade unions disestablished in 1994
1895 establishments in Belgium
1994 disestablishments in Belgium

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.