Meeting recommends policies to end women workers’ rights violations in Sub Saharan Africa
13.04.2018 During a campaign for maternity protection in Nigeria, Oluchi Okorie, from IndustriALL Global Union affiliate, the Nigerian Union of...
13.04.2018 During a campaign for maternity protection in Nigeria, Oluchi Okorie, from IndustriALL Global Union affiliate, the Nigerian Union of...
Earth Day is April 22, 2018. CUPE’s National Environment Committee wants to profile some of the positive environmental steps CUPE...
As a labour dispute between York University and their academic workers moves into its sixth week, the union representing York’s...
It has been over a year since the collective agreement expired for Weyburn city workers, members of CUPE 90. The current...
At our 2017 National Convention, members called for CUPE to respond to the crisis by lobbying the federal government to...
Namibia: Private influence in early childhood education and need to hire qualified teachers Topics in this post: The Namibia National...
In April 2015, after civil war broke out, DNO fired its Yemeni workforce by text message and left the country....
The Responsible Mining Index 2018, launched in Geneva, Switzerland, on 11 April, assesses 30 global mining companies on several economic,...
Education unions mobilise to reinforce Brazilian democracy Topics in this post: Education International took part in a solidarity rally for...
Last year’s provincial budget introduced some of the most dramatic cuts to Saskatchewan’s public services and social safety net since...
Representatives of CUPE Newfoundland and Labrador say Minister of Finance Tom Osborne is attempting to recover after dropping the ball in negotiations,...
The Respect Fast Food Workers' Alliance (RESPECT) won an important partial victory in their long-running campaign for fast food workers'...
As part of the push for more and better jobs for women workers on banana plantations in Ghana, the IUF...
Over the past years, the Iraqi government has increased its use of temporary and wage workers, and there are now more...
The International Alliance in Support of Workers in Iran (IASWI) was formed in 1999 in Toronto-Canada and formally announced its formation in January 2000. In nearly two decades of continuous activism, we have played an impactful role in securing international support for Iranian workers’ struggles against the Islamic Republic of Iran, employers, and the inhumane conditions the capitalist order has imposed on working-class lives in Iran. During these years, our politics and the foundational basis guiding our activism have been predicated on working-class traditions with an uncompromising emphasis on working-class independence and autonomy.