Turin factory occupation of 1920
This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Swedish. (February 2013) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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The Turin factory occupation of 1920 started off in 1919 when 30,000 workers in Turin, many of them at the Fiat factories, got represented in the workers councils. The council uprising started in 1920 to spread with factory occupations where the management was overtaken by the workers. Strikes spread over the whole country. The anarchist Errico Malatesta and revolutionary Antonio Gramsci play a key role in the occupation. The incident was part of the social unrest period known in Italy as the Biennio Rosso.
References[]
- Ericson/Johansson: Anarkisterna i klasskampen. Tribun 1969. p. 98-104. (in Swedish)
- Riesel, René: Råden och rådsorganisationen. IS 1968. (in Swedish)
- Jacobson, Staffan: Anarkismens återkomst. Lund 2006. p. 40 (in Swedish)
Categories:
- 1920 in Italy
- Antonio Gramsci
- Anarchism in Italy
- Riots and civil disorder in Italy
- 1920 riots
- Labor disputes in Italy
- Labour relations by company
- Labor dispute stubs
- Italian history stubs
- Anarchism stubs