The union movement is proud to have links with friends and comrades around the world – our solidarity is without borders.
Saturday 19 July 2025
10:15 – 10:45 International Tent – Authors@Bookmarks: Our Island Stories by Corinne Fowler
Corrine Fowler is Professor of Colonialism and Heritage in Museum Studies at the University of Leicester. Between 2018 and 2022, Fowler directed a child-led history and writing project called ‘Colonial Countryside: National Trust Houses Reinterpreted’. She also co-authored the 2020 National Trust report on its country houses’ historical links to the British Empire. Our island Stories brings together two of Corrine’s passions, history and rambling. The book is comprised of 10 country walks which explore the impact of empire and colonialism on both the British countryside and its inhabitants. Corrine will discuss how profits of overseas colonial activities directly contributed to enclosure, land clearances and dispossession. These histories, usually considered separately, continue to link the lives of their descendants now.
11:00 – 11:50 International Tent – Unions winning against the Far Right internationally
Joining us in this session is Beth Staunton from ETUI who shares the work undertaken to determine how best to tackle divisive politics on an international scale. One not to miss!
12:10 – 13:10 International Tent – Workers organising for justice: Voices from Syria and Sudan
This talk and discussion bring first hand accounts from Syrian and Sudanese organisers who are building independent unions in conditions of war and dictatorship, challenging sectarianism and division and fighting for workers’ rights. It also highlights how foreign intervention fuels these conflicts and how trade unionists here can take a stand in solidarity with these struggles for justice and with refugees displaced by war and oppression.
13:20 – 14:00 International Tent – Authors@Bookmarks: Palestine, Imperialism and the Struggles for Freedom by Philip Marfleet
For over 100 years Palestinians have resisted colonial occupation, displacement, and dispossession. Yet much of their long history of resistance has remained hidden. Palestine, imperialism, and the struggle for freedom follows their struggles against Britain, the Zionist settler movement, and the state of Israel and its powerful allies. It looks in detail at the Great Uprising that resisted Britain’s Mandate regime, the intifadas that have challenged Israeli rule, and continuing efforts to resist colonisation of the West Bank and Gaza. Throughout this account, the book considers the achievements of the Palestinian national movement – and its crises and setbacks. The book also examines radicalising impacts of Palestinian resistance across the Middle East. It sees struggle against imperialism as the basis for social justice across the region and argues that revolutionary change in the Arab states will play a decisive role in the liberation of Palestine. Philip Marfleet is Emeritus Professor of Social Science at the University of East London, UK. He is the author of Revolution and Counter-revolution in Iran (1988), Intifada: Zionism, Imperialism, and Palestinian Resistance (1989), Refugees in a Global Era (2006), and Egypt – Contested Revolution (2016). He is editor with Rabab El Mahdi of Egypt – the Moment of Change (2009) and with Keiko Sakai of Iraq since the Invasion (2020).
14:15 – 15:00 International Tent – Authors@Bookmarks: A People’s History of the Anti-Nazi-League by Geoff Brown
As living standards stagnate and fall, the threat of war grows and the climate crisis worsens, far right and fascist parties are growing in many countries including Britain.The problem is not a new one. Demanding the compulsory deportation of all immigrants, in the 1970s the Nazi National Front was able to claim it was becoming a major party, coming third in many local elections. Written by its full-time organiser in Manchester, drawing on many in-depth interviews, this book shows how the Anti Nazi League (ANL) stopped the National Front. Challenging every attempt by the fascists to organise on the streets and elsewhere, its 40,000 members built groups in workplaces, unions, schools and colleges. Women, gay people, football fans organised ANL groups. Together with its sister organisation, Rock Against Racism, the ANL organised two national carnivals, each supported by tens of thousands of young people, Black and white. Nine million leaflets were given out and seven hundred thousand badges sold. The National Front was humiliated in the 1979 general election. By 1981 it was broken as a national organisation.
15:15 – 16:30 International Tent – DEBATE: Can America (and the world) survive another Trump Administration?
We’re sure you’ll agree – the situation in America is something we can’t quite comprehend. Here to discuss what exactly is going on and the implications for workers and trade unions are Sadie Fulton, Policy and Campaigns Officer, TUC South West, George Mann, US Singer and Activists, and US activist Yahmóʔ ʔAhqha.