Archives of Indian Labour

Permanent URI for this communityhttps://dans.nls.ac.in/handle/123456789/3878

ARCHIVES OF INDIAN LABOUR

(copied over from the original)

The Archives of Indian Labour was set up in July, 1998 as a collaborative project of the V.V. Giri National Labour Institute and the Association of Indian Labour Historians. The Archives of Indian Labour is dedicated to the cause of preserving and making accessible the fast depleting documents on the working class with the belief that,

"Archive is to society what memory is to human beings"

The Archives was instituted in order to address the urgent need for preservation of rapidly decaying documents and material on labour and to provide for greater public access to these. It has long been felt that documents and data on Indian labour -now and in the past - are being irretrievably lost. This was primarily due to the neglect and lack of an organised initiative to preserve these documents in India. The Archives of Indian Labour was constituted to overcome this lacuna of adequate documentation of the life and labour of the working class. Its long-term objective is to act as a specialised repository of records and voices of workers, and preserve textual, visual and oral records on labour in India.

The archive, apart from being a repository of sources and documents also builds collections and initiates research in the field of labour history. The collections are generated through projects commissioned especially for the purpose and through institutional documents donated by various organisations. Documents related to the labour movement (generated by workers' organisations, state and business enterprises) are preserved at the archives, in addition to personal narratives, memoirs, video and audio material. The archives combine this effort with an effective public dissemination system of which the offline and on-line access to the digital archives is a major component. Seminars, working papers, film shows, and publications ensure effective ways of disseminating information generated by the archives and other research programmes. The core activities of the archives are, thus:

  • Digital Archiving
  • Research and Collection
  • Public Interface and Dissemination

Some unique features of the Archives are:

  • Full-fledged digital structure: The documents and material on labour related issues are stored and made available in digital form. This is the first fully digital archives in the country and aspires to be the prime repository of labour related records.
  • Integrated Multimedia Storage and Retrieval System: The Archives is enabled to store records and material in different media formats, such as printed material, audio, video and digital forms and provide access to these through an integrated delivery system.
  • Enhanced Public Access: The digital access system installed at the Archives enables fast and meaningful delivery of documents through different access modes, such as offline networked PCs at the Archives, through CDs, and now over the World Wide Web. This enables a far greater access directly to the documents right to the level of page of a document or a tagged audio and video clip than a traditional archival system. A much wider public now can have access to basic information on conditions of labour over time.
  • Integration of historical and contemporary records: The digital archives enables simultaneous access to records of both the historical and contemporary periods. This provides historical depth to contemporary issues and situates historical changes in a contemporary perspective.
  • Focus on Records of the Unorganised sector labour: The archive has through special collections focused on the activities of workers of the unrecorded sector. A large number of interviews of workers and labour activists and documents of the labour movement in the sector have been stored and can be accessed.

You Can Help Us

Archives of Indian Labour preserves any kind of resources on issues related to labour, including:

  • Personal correspondence and biographical material of labour leaders
  • Documents of trade unions
  • Journals and newspapers addressing the labouring poor
  • Pamphlets, leaflets and posters issued by trade unions
  • Relevant papers of employees organisations
  • Relevant documents of business corporations
  • Oral testimonies, personal narratives of participants in labour struggles
  • Photographs, video tapes and films on labour
  • Work songs and other similar material of workers' culture
  • Trial proceedings in courts of law
  • Records of individual and collective labour disputes
  • Papers on international working class bodies
  • Records of the Ministry of Labour, National Commissions on Labour and other Government Agencies

The prospective social partners, in building up the archive, include:

  • Trade Unions
  • Employer's Organisations
  • Documentation Organisations
  • Libraries
  • Government Departments
  • Journalists
  • Research Institutes
  • Individual Researchers
  • NGOs
  • Social Activists

You could help us by contributing valuable data to the Archives of Indian Labour. Please feel free to contact us at:


Archives of Indian Labour
Integrated Labour History Research Programme
V.V.Giri National Labour Institute
Sector 24, NOIDA
Uttar Pradesh, PIN: 201 301
Tele: 91-120-2411469
E-mail: ilhrpnli[at]gmail.com

ASSOCIATION of INDIAN LABOUR HISTORIANS (AILH)

The Association of Indian Labour Historians is a professional body of historians, social scientists and scholars interested in furthering the historical understanding of the conditions of labour and labouring people.

The Association was founded in December 1996. The AILH provides a forum for interaction among scholars through regular meetings, seminars, conferences and publications. A major objective of the Association is to preserve, generate and make accessible documents and materials relating to the history and heritage of the Indian working class.

The Association, through its activities, also aims to revive and disseminate research on Indian labour. These are pursued through collaboration with universities, research institutions and similar bodies and with individuals associated with the labour movement.

Dr. Rana Behal
42 Deshbandhu Society
15 Patparganj
Delhi 110092
Ph-91-11-2721744

Integrated Labour History Research Programme

The Integrated Labour History Research Programme (ILHRP) is a specialised research programme on labour history research, set up in collaboration with the Association of Indian Labour Historians (AILH), a body of professional historians and scholars interested in history of labour. The overall aim of the ILHRP is to initiate, integrate and revive historical research on labour in India and is the first of its kind in the country. The programme has three mutually reinforcing components such as digital archiving of Indian labour; writing labour history of India; and interdisciplinary research. The archive systematically collects and preserves various documents and material concerning the working class in digital form, through collaboration and networking with various stakeholders (such as trade unions, NGOs, governmental departments and business houses). Networking with similar agencies (national and international) involved in digital archiving is also a crucial aspect of the archive. So far, the archive is the country's largest digital repository of labour documents, with more than 15 gigabytes of data on the World Wide Web, for public access. The collections for the archives are generated through commissioning and monitoring research and collection projects on prioritised areas of labour history, which involves negotiation and networking with experts and agencies, both within and outside the country. The programme also organises regular academic discussions, seminars and colloquia on the prioritised areas of labour history. The programme has so far more than 50 completed/ ongoing research and collection projects. Since year 2000, the programme has published 18 working papers and organised around 85 seminars/discussions, including 10 international seminars on labour history.

ILHRP has recently launched a project titled, "History of Dalit Movement and Labour Movement in India". The Project aims to document and research dalit movement in India focusing specially on the movement's interface with labour movement. The project attempts to fill the glaring lacunae in contemporary scholarly and political discourse by researching the sociological and historical intersection between labour and dalit movement. The activities undertaken in the project will trace the emergence, track the turning points and analyze the regional dimensions of both these movements.

International Conferences on Labour History

One of the most significant contributions of the ILHRP has been the 10 major International Conferences on Labour History organised to deliberate on significant themes like 'Towards Global Labour History: New Comparisons', 'Expanding the Frontiers of Labour History', 'Work and Non-Work: Histories in the Long Term', and 'Labour History - A Return to Politics'. These conferences provide an important platform for historians, social scientists and scholars to deliberate upon varied dynamics of labour history, furthering the historical understanding of the conditions on labour and labouring people. Scholars from around 20 countries across the world have been participating in the conferences on Labour History.

Joint Advisory Committee

The programme is continuously advised and monitored by a Joint Advisory Committee, which is constituted of nominees and representatives from both the Institute and the AILH. The current JAC Members of the Programme are:
  • Dr. H. Srinivas
  • Prof. Sumit Sarkar
  • Director General, National Archives of India
  • Dr. Ravi Vasudevan
  • Prof. Madhvan K. Palat
  • Dr. Indu Agnihotri
  • Dr. Prabhu P. Mohapatra
  • Dr. Rana P. Behal
  • Dr. Chitra Joshi
  • Dr. S.K. Sasikumar
Centre Co-ordinator
Dr. S.K. Sasikumar, Senior Fellow

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 70
  • Item
    Monetary crisis and the WFTU : (Document on the Monetary Crisis prepared by the WFTU's Working Group and STATEMENT on International Economic, Commercial, Financial and Monetary problems. Adopted by the 22nd Session of the WFTU General Council - Bucharest, 1st-3rd November 1972)
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1972) All-India Trade Union Congress
    The booklet consists of two parts. 1. Document on the Monetary Crisis prepared by the WFTU's Working Group. Chapters: Domination of American capital; Great capitalist powers and capitalist exploitation; Causes of the monetary crisis; Developing countries and the crisis; Manifestation of the structural crisis; Acuteness of the crisis; Fight against monopolist domination. 2. Statement on International Economic, Commercial, Financial and Monetary problems adopted by the 22nd Session of the WFTU General Council - Bucharest, 1st-3rd November 1972.
  • Item
    Withdraw the Black Bills: Labour Relations Bill and Trade Union Bills analysed
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1950) All-India Trade Union Congress
    Pamphlet focuses on statements submitted by AITUC delegattion to the Triparties Labour Conference to discuss the Labour Relations Bill and Trade Unions Bill in a meeting on March 20 and 21 1950. The delegate considers these bills fascist measures.
  • Item
    Modern Imperialism : An economic and statistical survey
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1971) All-India Trade Union Congress
    The economic and statistical survey was conducted by staff researchers at the USSR Academy of Sciences, the Institute of World Economy and International Relations, and the Institute of the International Workers’ movement and was first published in the journal “Peace, Freedom and Socialism”. Chapters include: Concentration of production and capital; Banking capital; Finance capital and the financial oligarchy; Capital export; Uneven development of capitalism; Growing economic role of the state; Imperialism is militarism; The fall of the colonial empires; Imperialism and wage labour.
  • Item
    31st Session All-India Trade Union Congress : Reports on Industries. Reports on Condition of Workers in Certain Industries. Visakhapatnam, 26 - 31 October 1980
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1980) All-India Trade Union Congress
    Includes reports on the following industries: Road transport; Railways; Cement; Aluminium; Plantation; General insurance. Reports on conditions of workers in some industries: Teachers; Construction; Hotel; Ports & docks; Steel; Engineering; Beech.
  • Item
    Recent wage agreements : Collection of major wage agreements in public and private sector industries and undertakings
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1980) All-India Trade Union Congress
    A number of wage agreements at a national industrial level were signed between 1978 and 1980, with a foreword by AITUC general secretary K. G. Sriwastava. The agreements are: Bharat Electronics; Hindustan Aeronautics; Synthetic Drugs Plant (IDPL), Hyderabad; Engineering Industries, West Bengal; Jute Industry, West Bengal; Bajasthan Textile Industry; West Bengal Textile Industry; NTC Mills, Rajasthan; Kulti Works, IISCO; Ideal Jawa, Mysore; Raigarh Jute; Kirloskar Electric; IDPL (Surgical Instrument), Madras; Bata, Faridabad; Jay Engineering Works, Calcutta; Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers; Ports & Docks; Steel Industry; Banking Industry; Coal Industry; Kanpur Textiles; Tamil Nadu Textiles; Karnataka Textiles; Tamil Nadu NTC Mills; Delhi NTC Mill; Birla Mills, Delhi; Bonus Settlement of Tamil Nadu Textile Workers; Delhi Cloth Mills; ONGC (Oil & Natural Gas Commission); Indian Oil; Bharat Heavy Electricals; NMDC (National Mineral Development Corporation); Motor Industries Co. (MICo); International Instruments; WIDIA (India); Hindustan Copper Ltd.
  • Item
    The Face of US Imperalism
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1971) All-India Trade Union Congress
    The booklet is an attempt to answer the question "What is America?", and is made up of articles as an aid to study. The articles are: The monopoly offensive; The problems of inflation in the United States; The scientific-technological revolution; Fear; Learning to leave with fear; Why they revolt; Fighting the monopolies; and Social sleight of hand.
  • Item
    Index Fraud in Ahmedabad: AITUC's Note sent to the Experts Committee on Ahmedabad Index
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1964) All-India Trade Union Congress
    Textile worker strikes in Ahmedabad were held on 8 August 1964 to protest against the compulsory deposit scheme. Prices have risen steadily, the official consumer price index in Ahmedabad was wrong, and workers have been missed out on their rightful income. Present wage scales mean workers are not earning enough.
  • Item
    AITUC General Council Meeting : General Secretary's Report and Other Materials. Hyderabad 3-5 1985
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1985) All-India Trade Union Congress
    The report contains: an Outline Report of the General Secretary; The Central Budget and other measures; Spurt in Share prices; Uptrend in Wholesale Price Index; Consumer Price Index; Industrial "Sickness", closures, etc.; Textile Policy Statement of the Government; Bhopal Gas tragedy; AITUC – CITU Correspondence; Central Trade Unions' proposals with regard to verification of membership.
  • Item
    AITUC General Council Meeting : General Secretary's Report and Information Materials. Bombay: 2 to 4, 1989
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1989) All-India Trade Union Congress
    The conference report has: A note on some urgent problems and tasks by General Secretary Indrajit Gupta; General Secretary's Report; Developments and Work Since last General Council; Lockouts, Closures, industrial sickness; Recent Wage Agreements – Major Terms; Profile of Public Sector Enterprises 1987-88; Employment and Unemployment; Notified minimum wages; Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers; and Proposals for amendments to AITUC Constitution.
  • Item
    31st Session All-India Trade Union Congress Messages, Resolutions and Speeches, Visakhapatnam 26 - 31 October 1980
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1980) All-India Trade Union Congress
    Includes reports on the following industries: Preface by the AITUC secretary; Welcome address by chairman of the reception committee M. V. Bhadram; AITUC presidents’ inaugural address Dange, Shripad Amrit; condolence resolutions; list of delegations from abroad; Messages received from overseas unions and Indian politicians and supporters; Speeches from fraternal delegates from abroad—World Federation of Trade Union (WFTU) acting general secretary Ibrahim Zakaria; All-Union Central Committee of Trade Unions secretary V. F. Bogatikov; Central Council of Trade Unions of Afghanistan member Fazal Ahmed Chakhansory; Bangladesh Trade Union Kendra vice-president Nur-Ur-Islam; Central Council of Czechoslavak Trade Unions secretary Jirina Vesela; Trade Union of National Salvation of Kampuchea organisation department secretary Chan Vanny; Central Council of Mongolian Trade Unions member G. Gelenkhu; Vietnam Federation of Trade Unions secretariat member Tran Anh Lien; Central Council of Confederation of Trade Unions of Yugoslavia presidium member Janos Sreder; West Germany’s FDGB member Fritz Roesel; Central Council of Hungarian Trade Unions international department head Karoly Szlovatsik; Committee for International Trade Unions Unity in Australia representative Don Henderson. Resolutions on: Disarmament and duty of the working class; Diego Garcia; Iran-Iraq war; Solidarity with Kampuchea, Vietnam and Laos; With the Afghan revolution; Solidarity with the struggle in Southern Africa and Namibia; Repression in Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka; Solidarity with working people of Latin America; Solidarity with Palestinian People’s struggle; Solidarity with workers and people of Korea; Solidarity with the workers of Turkey; Bonus; Wages and DA; Industrial relations law; Against anti-democratic ordinances; Trade union unity; Social Security; Right to work and employment; Reduction of working hours; Agricultural workers; Working women; Prices; Minimum wages in scheduled employments; Rectify the consumer price index; Lock-outs and closures; Communal disturbances; North-eastern region; In support of journalists and newspaper employees; Solidarity with the struggle of Life Insurance Corporation and the General Insurance Corporation employees; Repression, Firings and attacks on trade unions; Support to the struggles of the peasantry; Nationalism of industries which have been taken over; Retrenchment of tobacco workers; Nationalisation of tea concerns; Pollution; Vijayanagaer steel plant; Beedi workers and their demands; Sixth (five-year) plan frame; Demands of the railway workers. Appeal to all workers: Forward to end the miseries of capitalist rule. Workers’ pledge on the 60th anniversary of AITUC. Reports of commissions on: Wages, dearness allowance and bonus; Social security; Trade union rights and unity. Lists of elected office bearers, members of the working committee, the general council. Credential committee report: union membership numbers by area and industry.