ALL INDIA TRADE UNION CONGRESS (AITUC)

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The All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC) is the oldest trade union federation in India, founded on 31 October 1920 in Bombay (Mumbai). Among its founders were renowned nationalist leader Lala Lajpat Rai, ( 1865-1928) who became the first President of AITUC, Joseph Baptista (1864-1930), N.M. Joshi (1879-1955) and Diwan Chaman Lall (1892-1973). Formation of the AITUC led to it being the designated the official representative of the Indian Workers at the International Labour Organisation (ILO) from 1921 onwards. The first trade unions had come into being from late nineteenth century in India in jute mills, railways, cotton textiles. Bombay (now Mumbai) a textile manufacturing hub had its first trade union in the shape of Bombay Millhands Association headed by Narayan Meghaji Lokhande (1848-1897). The incipient trade union movement had close links with social reform and anti-caste movements. Numerous strikes and other forms of protests by workers have been recorded throughout the 19th century. By the twentieth century the unions extended their work to other sectors including municipal workers, printing press, workers in engineering goods factories etc. The period from 1900 to 1920 also witnessed hundreds of strikes, massive meetings & processions. The period witnessed the closing of ranks of trade unionists with those leading the freedom struggle against colonial rulers. The unions had gone on strike opposing the arrest of popular leader of freedom struggle Bal Gangadhar Tilak in 1908 who later on took initiative for hosting the all India congregation of unions to form a national centre. The stalwarts of Indian freedom struggle like Jawahar Lal Nehru (1889-1964) Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose (1897-1945), V.V. Giri (1894-1980) also chaired the sessions of AITUC. At the beginning the AITUC had 64 affiliated unions with 1,40,000 members, and grew to become the largest trade union confederation in India by 1947. It is to be noted that well known trade unionists of time attended the session of international Labour organisation (ILO) and N.M Joshi was a long period member of the Governing body of ILO representing the workers. In the late 1920s the AITUC became more radical, partly under communist influence of the emerging communist movement. A split followed in 1929, and the Indian Trade Union Federation (ITUF) led by former AITUC president V.V. Giri was founded. AITUC and ITUF merged again in 1939 and since then AITUC continued playing its role as vanguard of working class and played a strong role in the struggle for independence. It also played very important role in the foundation of World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU), 1945. The AITUC had close association with the Communist Party of India (estd 1925), but was never formally affiliated to it. The principle followed throughout from its foundation conference was “Free from Governments, free from Managements & Free from Political Parties”. Its membership has been given as 14.2 million in 2013, making it the third largest trade union confederation in India. The AITUC has its headquarters in New Delhi. The collection presented here consists mainly of the documents of the AITUC for the period 1928-1970 that were included in one of the major digitization collection project of trade union documents of "The Archives of Indian Labour", set up in 1998 as a collaborative initiative of the V.V.Giri National Labour Institure(VVGNLI) and the Association of Indian Labour Historians (AILH).

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    Trade Union Shiksha Part 3
    (1988) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
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    Trade Union Shiksha Part 1 & 2
    (1988) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
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    Trade Union Education : Lecture notes (Part III)
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1987) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
    The lectures are designed to impart the fundamentals of class-based theory to union activists. Chapter titles: “Organise the unorganised”: 21. The organised versus the Unorganised sector, 22. Child and women labour, 23. Role of organised workers. New technologies; what it means; Impact of new technology-in the context of different socio-economic systems; Indian trade unions and new technology; Struggle against ‘privatisation’: for defence and expansion of the public sector; Struggle for trade union unity; Role of the working class in the contemporary world.
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    Marxism - Leninism & Our current problems
    (Communist Party of India, 1994) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
    The booklet aims to restate some of the communist parties’ fundamental ideological positions. The Trissur Conference and the last national council called for a renewed ideological campaign, especially as recent events had severely jolted the party, and thrown ideology into confusion and disorientation. It is reaffirmation of ideology that does not aim to be new, though certain recent or India-specific issues are also addressed including the effect of the Social and Technological Revolution (STR) on class struggle, the effect of new government policies, new manifestations of the imperialist offensive, the role of class and caste differentiation, their impact on each other. Chapters include: Marxism-Leninism (Only scientific theory of social transformation); Need of ideology: Unity of theory and practice; CPI’s commitment and goal; Renewal of Marxism-Leninism; Indian philosophical thought and Marxist philosophy; Dialectical materialism; Struggle against alien ideologies; Laws of motion of capitalism; Neo-liberalism (the new face of Imperialism); Imperialist offensive against developing countries; Doctrine of class struggles (New Dimensions); Has class struggle abated?; Class and caste; Struggle against casteism. A Hindi version of the booklet is also in the database: "Marxvad, Leninvad: Aur Hamari Aaj Ki Samasyana"
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    Marxvad, Leninvad: Aur Hamari Aaj Ki Samasyana
    (Communist Party of India, 1994) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
    Hindi langauge version of "Marxism - Leninism & Our current problems". The booklet aims to restate some of the communist parties’ fundamental ideological positions. The Trissur Conference and the last national council called for a renewed ideological campaign, especially as recent events had severely jolted the party, and thrown ideology into confusion and disorientation. It is reaffirmation of ideology that does not aim to be new, though certain recent or India-specific issues are also addressed including the effect of the Social and Technological Revolution (STR) on class struggle, the effect of new government policies, new manifestations of the imperialist offensive, the role of class and caste differentiation, their impact on each other. Chapters include: Marxism-Leninism (Only scientific theory of social transformation); Need of ideology: Unity of theory and practice; CPI’s commitment and goal; Renewal of Marxism-Leninism; Indian philosophical thought and Marxist philosophy; Dialectical materialism; Struggle against alien ideologies; Laws of motion of capitalism; Neo-liberalism (the new face of Imperialism); Imperialist offensive against developing countries; Doctrine of class struggles (New Dimensions); Has class struggle abated?; Class and caste; Struggle against casteism.
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    World picture of poverty, unemployment, inequality and injustice portrayed during summit talks & quest for solutions
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1995) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
    Summary of the 1995 World Summit for Social Development in Copenhagen looked at global poverty, unemployment and unjust and inequitable distribution of the world’s wealth and resources.
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    Trade Union Education : Lecture notes (Part I & II)
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1987) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
    The lectures are designed to impart the fundamentals of class-based theory to union activists. Chapter titles: The emergence and growth of the working class and the rise of trade unions; The rise of the trade union movement in India; Working class and India’s freedom struggle; The struggle between political trends and the resulting splits in the trade union movement; Post-Independence developments in Indian economy and in the work force; Post-Independence working class struggles and trade union movement; The results summed up; The Indian workers and the international trade union movement; The character of a trade union; Revolutionary trade unionism versus reformist trade unionism; The Wage Question; Question of Dearness Allowance; The Wage Struggle Summed Up & The Current Debate; Bonus and Social Security; Industrial Relations: The Struggle for Trade Union Rights; Labour Laws; Trade Union Functioning; Mass Work and Mass Mobilisation: Trade Union Education.
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    A report to the AITUC Working Committee, April 24-25, 1995 (as finally adopted)
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1995) Bardhan, Ardhendu Bhushan
    Includes a rundown of the recent national and international situation, especially failure of Indian economy after 4 years of new policies; who is gaining and who is losing from new policies; AITUC position; West Bengal industrial policy; the AITUC-ILO workshop; Struggle against privatisation incl. Enron; Productivity and service; Wage negotiations; Women and child labour; Industrial ‘sickness’; Employment; Drive to organise the unorganised sections; Trade union unity; Jubilee year; Finances; Trade union record; International tasks.