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One of the images had he face all messed up because when they shipped the print out it as folded over and plastic stuck together...so we decided to make it a photo opportunity. Here's my husband as a disgruntled postal worker.
Picturehouse workers from Brixton, Hackney, Crouch End and Central staged a demo in Central London as part of what has now become the biggest cinema workers campaign in UK history. With music and a procession to relevant Central London sites, the day ended with a rousing speech from MP John Mcdonnell, the Shadow Chancellor.
Following months of strike action, the workers have been left with little choice but to call for a Boycott of the entire Picturehouse chain as well as parent company Cineworld.
Giants of the UK film industry have supported the call to Boycott and put their names to a letter to Cineworld CEO Mooky Greindinger, asking him to return to the negotiation table and pay the London Living Wage. Sir Ian McKellen, Sir Patrick Stewart, Richard Curtis, Lindsay Duncan, Sir Mark Rylance are just a few of the stars backing the campaign for the Living Wage at Picturehouse cinemas.
© Marc Cowan/livingstafflivingwage
Workers'll always be workers.
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At Worker’s Museum 12/1 2016
at 14.15
Following artists are bringing ultracontemporary artworks about emergencies of today: Hartmut Stockter, Nadia Plesner Ludvigsen, Nina Wengel, Ismar Čirkinagić, Dagmar Radmacher, Thierry Geoffroy.
And at 15.00 presentation by Carsten Friberg on artistic preoccupation and production as respons to apathy in our society.
Converted to Black and White picture WITH Sidewinder Photo Colour Balancer "F2-C17" (x-platform) SIMPLE BASIC DIGITAL PHOTO EDITOR
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2 May 2023, Ijebu-Ode, Nigeria - A worker at a fish processing plant is cutting catfish before it will be smoked.
FISH4ACP supports Nigeria’s efforts to boost the catfish sector because of its potential to create jobs and business opportunities, in particular for women and youth.
FISH4CP is an initiative of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (OACPS) implemented by FAO with funding from the European Union (EU) and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Cooperation and Development (BMZ).
More on FISH4ACP in Nigeria: www.fao.org/in-action/fish-4-acp/where-we-work/africa/nig...
Project: GCP /GLO/028/EC
Photo: ©FAO/Giulio Napolitano
1 Sur, Talca's main street. A worker throws down a wheelbarrow of debris over the balcony of what's left of Multicentro, one of Talca's department stores.
Workers on their way to demolish Nanpu. I never noticed any tension between residents and workers continually demolishing the area they spent their whole lvies in.
In early 1998, around Australia, thousands of workers massed in solidarity with the Maritime Union of Australia. “MUA HERE TO STAY,’’ they chanted. Many workers and socialists were hoping that the tide had turned, that unionism was returning as a growing force in the Australian political landscape. The pickets, the rallies and the overwhelming sense of solidarity contributed to the determined resistance and the euphoria surrounding the victory in the High Court which permitted the wharfies, who had been sacked by the stevedoring company, Patricks, to return to work.
In the following years, it became clear that the optimism of the period did not translate into a resurgence in union membership.
United Farm Workers members marching, donkey in foreground, n.d. This photograph appeared in the 2016 LaGuardia and Wagner Archives calendar, Working People, courtesy of the Migrant Farm Workers Organizing Movement Collection, Special Collections, University of Texas at Arlington. For additional photographs from the Archives' collections, go to www.laguardiawagnerarchive.lagcc.cuny.edu