View allAll Photos Tagged workers
I took this picture on 27-03-2010 while the railway workers are returning from their work near burdwan, west bengal, india
Angels Gate is now an official polling place. Poll workers in our Downstairs Gallery, assisting voters in the 2006 mid-term election.
Some workers were preparing to cut street trees due to some of heavy rains and hard winds coming to town.
ถ่ายมาแล้วมันดูเป็นฉากละครดี #street #Bangkok #thailand #theatre #temple #people #workers #construction #colorful #sonya7ii #dailylife
Eager to learn. A core group of 30 Polish construction workers in Norway participates in language training classes as part of the IOM project to empower Polish migrant workers.
On 26 April 2019 the ILO in collaboration with the Ministry of Administrative Development Labour and Social Affairs and the Netherlands Embassy organised a 5km fun run for workers in Doha's Aspire Park. Over, 1,000 runners took part in the event, held in recognition of the contribution workers make to the development of modern-day Qatar and to promote solidarity with the workers.
Indian workers
Indian workers protest
Indian workers protest
indian workers protest
indian workers protest
August 1910
Three of the youngest boys working in Holden, Leonard Co., Bennington, Vt.
Said they [would] continue to work after summer vacation.
Louis Godbout (right hand end) 132 Lincoln Street.
John Friedman, (Tallest) 120 Lincoln St.,
Joe Lacroiz, (Second in height) 110 Lincoln St.
Location: Bennington, Vermont.
They all abandoned me during the holiday weekend and left me working outrageous shifts :-D
I'm back in the land of the living and am catching up!
This year we planned our holiday decorations for all of the young children in the family. The tree only had Hallmark ornaments and the rest of the house had little bears virtually everywhere. Many were working - with a few accidents here and there too!
Egyptian workers make up a large part of the construction work force in Amman, Jordan. © ILO/Jared J. Kohler
Michael Sommer, German trade unionist leader and the chairman of the German Confederation of Trade Unions (DGB) in Stuttgart, Germany.
We fight for the right to work in dignity and for social justice in Europe and all over the world!
International Workers' Day (also known as May Day) is a celebration of the international labour movement and left-wing movements. It commonly sees organized street demonstrations and marches by working people and their labour unions throughout most of the world. May 1 is a national holiday in more than 80 countries. It is also celebrated unofficially in many other countries.
Tag der Arbeit 2012
Michael Sommer, Bundesvorsitzender des Deutschen Gewerkschaftsbundes (DGB) in Stuttgart, Deutschland.
Wir kämpfen für das Recht auf Arbeit in Würde und für soziale Gerechtigkeit in Europa und der ganzen Welt!
Der Erste Mai wird auch als Tag der Arbeit, Maifeiertag oder Kampftag der Arbeiterbewegung bezeichnet. Er ist in Deutschland, Österreich, Teilen der Schweiz, Italien, Ungarn, Russland, der VR China, Spanien, Griechenland, Polen, Frankreich, Norwegen, Schweden, Slowenien, Finnland, Taiwan, der Türkei, Mexiko, Thailand, Nordkorea, Portugal, Jemen, Vietnam, Estland, Brasilien und vielen anderen Staaten gesetzlicher Feiertag.
Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media
without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.
AT&T workers and supporters formed a picket line in front of AT&T store in Boylston Ave., Boston, MA on May 19, 2017. The action marks the beginning of a 3-day strike to pressure the telecommunications company for better contracts for its retail workers.
Photo: Leonardo March/ Normal
Normal is a photography collective based in Boston, MA documenting political activism in the city. Find out more about us here:
Police clear the plant gates of striking workers outside the Celanese Corporation in Cumberland Maryland November 17, 1936.
The workers had maintained blockades prohibiting the movement of people and goods in or out of the plant without permission from strike headquarters.
More than 9,000 predominantly women workers began the plant-wide strike for higher wages, better working conditions and union recognition November 12th.
The management of the plant brought a number of supervisory employees into the strike-bound plant and attempted to move product out through the rail link. Several clashes with plant guards and police resulted in a number of injuries and arrests during the strike.
Three weeks into the strike, an agreement was reached raising wages and recognizing the Textile Workers of America Local 1874—making it the largest unit in the textile union.
The campaign for the union produced a young activist named George A. Meyers who helped lead the in-plant organizing and led a number of sit-down strikes within the plant. He would go on to become president of the local union and, in 1941, president of the Maryland and District of Columbia Industrial Union Council of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO).
Meyers joined the Communist Party during the fight to organize the union at Celanese and as president of the MD-DC CIO, led the fight to integrate basic industry—overseeing the successful efforts to integrate the Celanese and Kelly-Springfield plants in Cumberland, Glen L. Martin aircraft factory in Middle River and the Bethlehem-Fairfield shipyard in Baltimore.
Efforts throughout World War II by the CIO to desegregate jobs within the Bureau of Engraving in federal government and the Capital Transit Company in Washington, D.C. were waged in earnest but were ultimately less successful. The CIO also played a key role in the fight against police brutality in the District of Columbia in 1941.
After World War II, the onset of the cold war led to the expulsion of Communist Party members from most unions, including the Textile Workers.
Meyers went to jail for 3 ½ years for his membership in the Communist Party in the 1950s but went on to head the Party’s labor activities until his death in 1999.
The Celanese plant at its peak employed 13,000 workers producing materials made from synthetic fiber and closed in 1983.
For more information and related images, see www.flickr.com/gp/washington_area_spark/0U5439
The photographer is unknown. The image is an auction find.
Thai/Burma crossing point, A migrant worker returns her day pass to a security guard on her way back across the “friendship bridge” linking Mae Sot with Myawaddy on the Burmese side, a day pass costs 20 Bhat (30 pence) and enables the holder to work in one of the 235 mainly garment factories for 60/80 Bhat a day. March 2004
One of the "mules" that handle the ships through the Panama Canal. Some workers are standing near the mule.
Street Art found on a walk from Liverpool Street Station to Old Street. London. Saturday 21 January 2012
Garment workers in Sukoharjo, Indonesia.
Copyrights: ILO/Siswanto
Supported by:
INSIGHT II: www.ilo.org/jakarta/whatwedo/projects/WCMS_751714/lang--e...
UNIQLO Project: www.ilo.org/jakarta/whatwedo/projects/WCMS_736748/lang--e...