- Unione Sindacale Italiana
Infobox Union
name= USI
country=Italy
affiliation=
members=
full_name= Italian Workers Union
native_name= Unione Sindacale Italiana
founded= 1912
current=
head=
dissolved_date=
dissolved_state=
merged_into=
office=Rome , Italy
people=
website= [http://www.ecn.org/usi-ait http://www.ecn.org/usi-ait]
footnotes= Unione Sindacale Italiana ("USI"; "Italian Syndicalist Union" or "Italian Workers Union") is an Italiantrade union .Early history
The USI was founded in 1912, after a group of workers, previously affiliated with the
Confederazione Generale del Lavoro (CGI), met inModena and declared themselves linked to the legacy of the First International, and later joined the anarcho-syndicalistInternational Workers Association (IWA; "Associazione Internazionale dei Lavoratori" in Italian or "AIT" - ""Asociación Internacional de los Trabajadores" in the common Spanish reference).The most
left-wing "camere del lavoro" adhered in rapid succession to the USI, and it engaged in all major political battles forlabor rights - without ever adopting the militarist attitudes present with other trade unions. Nonetheless, after the outbreak ofWorld War I , USI was shaken by the dispute around the issue of Italy's intervention in the conflict on the Entente Powers' side. The problem was made acute by the presence of eminent pro-intervention, national-syndicalist voices inside the body:Alceste De Ambris ,Filippo Corridoni , and, initially,Giuseppe Di Vittorio . The union managed to maintain its opposition to militarism, under the leadership ofArmando Borghi andAlberto Meschi .The Fascist regime and afterwards
When the war ended, USI peaked in numbers (it was during this time that it joined the IWA, becoming known as the "USI-AIT"). It became a major opponent of
Benito Mussolini and the Fascist regime, fighting street battles with theBlackshirts - culminating in the August 1922 riots ofParma , when the USI-AIT facedItalo Balbo and his "Arditi ".USI-AIT was outlawed by Mussolini in 1926, but resumed its activities in clandestinity and exile. It fought against
Francisco Franco in theSpanish Civil War , alongside theConfederación Nacional del Trabajo andFederación Anarquista Ibérica , and took part in theSpanish Revolution . AfterWorld War II and the proclamation of the Republic, former members of the union followed the guidelines of theFederazione Anarchica Italiana that called for the creation of a unitary movement, and joined theConfederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro (CGIL).When CGIL split in 1950, several activists refounded USI-AIT - nonetheless, the group was marginal, and present only in some of Italy's regions until the 1960s. It is connected with Autonomism, and has kept its syndicalist message.
See also
*
Autonomism
*Biennio rosso
*Anarchism in Italy
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