Who could be considered a legitimate representative of South Africa’s working class, and even who constituted this class, was bitterly contested during the twentieth century. This chapter examines the struggles for international recognition by the rival constituents of South Africa’s labour movement, which was sharply divided along racial and ideological lines. Initially, the International Labour Organization and other similar bodies formed links with the white-dominated labour movement, which regarded itself as the legitimate representative of all workers in South Africa. This position was successfully contested by emerging black African trade unions who themselves, in the face of fierce repression, competed for financial support made available by various sections of the international labour movement.
CITATION STYLE
Money, D. (2020). The Struggle for Legitimacy: South Africa’s Divided Labour Movement and International Labour Organisations, 1919–2019. In Palgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements (pp. 383–408). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28235-6_17
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