Zenroren
Appearance
National Confederation of Trade Unions | |
Zenroren | |
Founded | November 21, 1989 |
---|---|
Members | 1.2 million |
Website | www |
The National Confederation of Trade Unions (全国労働組合総連合, Zenkoku Rōdōkumiai sōrengō), commonly known in Japanese as Zenroren (全労連), is a national trade union center.
Founding and history
Zenroren was founded on November 21, 1989. [1]
Party affiliation
Zenroren is not affiliated to any political party, but is generally aligned with the Japan Communist Party. [2]
Affiliated unions
21 industrial federations:
- All Japan Construction, Transport and General Workers' Union (CTG, kenkoro) (Incorporates the former JNR National Railway Locomotive Engineers' Union
- All-Japan Metal and Information Machinery Workers’ Unions (JMIU)
- All-Japan Federation of Automobile Transport Workers’ Unions (jiko-soren)
- National Federation of Ship Cargo Checkers’ Unions (kensu-roren)
- Telecommunication Industry Workers’ Unions (tsushinroso)
- National Federation of Consumers’ Cooperatives Workers’ Unions (seikyororen)
- Zenroren National Union of General Workers (Zenroren zenkoku-ippan)
- Textile and Clothing Industries Workers’ Union (seni-sanro)
- National Federation of Finance Workers’ Unions (kin-yu-roren)
- General Federation of Japan Printing and Publishing Workers’ Unions (zeninsoren)
- Japan Federation of Commercial Broadcasting Workers’ Unions (minpororen)
- Film and Allied Industry Workers’ Unions (eisanro)
- General Federation of Cinema and Theatrical Workers' Unions of Japan (eiensoren)
- Japan Federation of Medical Workers’ Unions (nihon-iroren)
- National Union of Welfare and Childcare Workers (fukushi-hoikuro)
- All-Japan Pensioners’ Union (nenkinsha-kumia)
- Japan Federation of National Public Service Employees’ Unions (kokko-roren)
- Japan Federation of Prefectural and Municipal Workers’ Unions (jichiroren)
- All-Japan Federation of Teachers’ and Staff Unions (zenkyo)
- Postal Industry Workers’ Union (yusanro)
- Liaison Council of Labor Unions in Public Corporations (tokushuhojin-roren)
Prefectural Federations in all 47 prefectures of Japan
See also
References
- ^ "This is Zenroren". Zenroren. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- ^ Hoover, William D (2011). Historical Dictionary of Postwar Japan. Scarecrow Press. p. 208. ISBN 0810854600.
External links
- Official website (in Japanese)