Introduction
The associations of Italian migrant workers represent a central aspect of the history of Italian emigration after the Second World War. In the past 20 years historiographic investigations have focused mainly on the analysis of the cultural and socio-political aspects of the associative networks, on the one hand by analysing the role of cultural circles in the assistance and integration of Italian workers, and on the other hand by dwelling on the transnational lifestyle of Italian communities abroad (Colucci Reference Colucci, Bevilacqua, De Clementi and Franzina2001 and Reference Colucci2008; Palidda Reference Palidda2005; Ricciardi Reference Ricciardi2013; Caruso Reference Caruso2019). Since the 1960s the associative networks of Italian migrants, already active since the 1950s in the European countries of immigration, experienced a process of progressive ‘stabilisation’ (Colucci Reference Colucci, Bevilacqua, De Clementi and Franzina2001, 426) in conjunction with the consolidation of migration flows and the introduction of free movement in the European Economic Community (hereafter EEC). Alongside the traditional forms of mutualism and legal and economic assistance to Italian workers abroad – carried out mostly by the Catholic Missions, the Caritas and the trade unions, which were fundamental reference points for Italian communities – larger organisations based at national, regional or provincial level also spread from the end of the 1960s onwards (Colucci and Sanfilippo Reference Colucci and Sanfilippo2010, 27; Sanfilippo Reference Sanfilippo2011, 368). The birth of this new type of ‘umbrella’ organisation is also partly the result of a process of sensitisation of the Italian political class, in particular of the main political parties, Democrazia Cristiana (DC) and Partito Comunista Italiano (PCI). Both parties began to pay more attention to the migration phenomenon, not only because it was a fundamental aspect of economic and socio-political balance in Italy, but also because the increasing number of Italian communities abroad were a reservoir of votes and consensus (Battiston Reference Battiston2012, 21; Marin Reference Marin, Mascitelli, Mycak and Papalia2016, 72).
The establishing of the FILEF must necessarily be intended and understood as part of this process. During the 1970s, the Federation became the largest ‘national’ umbrella organisation of migrant workers related to the communist and socialist sphere (Battiston Reference Battiston2012, 22). Through a ‘federal’ structure, within which cultural circles and democratic associations could join the Federation without formally losing their autonomy, the FILEF spread mainly in the Benelux countries, the Federal Republic of Germany and Switzerland; outside Europe, especially in Australia (Marin Reference Marin, Mascitelli, Mycak and Papalia2016, 90; Battiston Reference Battiston2004 and 2012). Despite the fact that the FILEF was the largest organisation of migrants with a socialist or communist political background, there are still few monographic studies that deal with the reconstruction of its trans- and supranational activities.Footnote 1 In this context, I intend, at least in part, to fill this gap. Through the investigation both of the setting up of the FILEF network in Italy and in the European immigration countries, and through the analysis of the principles and the policy objectives at the basis of the FILEF's action at an international level, this article aims to demonstrate the significant contribution the Federation made to the European political debate on human, social and civil rights for migrant workers.
I argue that the FILEF, through the proposal of an ‘International Statute of Migrant Workers’ Rights’ (the so called ‘White Paper’), acted as a ‘mediator’ between the associative network of Italian migrants abroad and the European institutions. In concrete terms, the FILEF started a discussion with the European Parliament and the European Commission, including a specific discourse on human rights and developing a project with the aim of strengthening the unity of the democratic working class and migrant workers. At the centre of this project was the idea of a European solidarity based on the overcoming of the nation-state as a point of reference for migration governance and integration policies. During the 1970s the Federation, therefore, played a central role in the processes of Europeanisation and transnationalisation of the democratic movement of migrant workers. In this sense, this essay is therefore intended to shed more light on the role that migrant associations, which are de facto non-governmental organisations and an essential part of European civil society, played in the processes of European integration, an aspect which has recently become the focus of attention of a considerable number of historiographical investigations (Ireland Reference Ireland1991; Kocka Reference Kocka, Hildermeier, Kocka and Conrad2000; Bade Reference Bade2003; Kaiser Reference Kaiser, Starie and Kaiser2005; Lucassen, Feldman and Oltmer Reference Lucassen, Feldman and Oltmer2010; Kaiser and Meyer Reference Kaiser, Meyer, Kaiser, Meyer and Bietz2010; Laschi, Deplano and Pes Reference Laschi, Deplano and Pes2020).
Through a transnational methodological approachFootnote 2 and on the basis of analyses of unpublished archive sources,Footnote 3 I proceed as follows: in the first part, which also serves an introductory function, I will trace the development of the FILEF network from its initial stages until the beginning of the 1970s. In the second part, I will examine in particular the proposal for an ‘International Statute of Migrant Workers’ Rights’, which the FILEF presented to the European Parliament three times, in 1971, 1973 and 1979. At the centre of the analysis will be both the process, with its different stages of discussion around the proposal, and the discourses which Paolo Cinanni, co-founder of the FILEF, developed on this topic at international congresses and conferences. In the third, concluding part, besides drawing the necessary conclusions, I will also illustrate possible paths for further historiographical analysis both of the FILEF and, more in general, of the Italian migrant associations after the Second World War.
The FILEF network in Europe from its foundation to the early 1970s
The FILEF was founded in Rome in 1967 at the behest of Carlo Levi, Paolo Cinanni and other politicians – deputies, trade unionists and intellectuals with a socialist, communist and liberal-democratic background (Breitenbach Reference Breitenbach1982, 114; De Donato and D'Amaro Reference De Donato and D'Amaro2005, 309; Prontera Reference Prontera, Baumeister, Bonomo and Schott2017, 159 and Reference Prontera, Eymond and Heusler2018, 38; Caruso Reference Caruso2019, 241–2; Battiston Reference Battiston2012, 22–3; Marin Reference Marin, Mascitelli, Mycak and Papalia2016, 72). The initiative was the result of a series of analyses and reflections on Italian emigration and its social, political and economic consequences, which both Levi and Cinanni had already formulated in the months preceding the foundation itself.Footnote 4 Far from considering the flow of young Italian labourers to northern European countries as a rebalancing element or an effective resolution for Italy's economic growth after the Second World War, Levi and Cinanni defined emigration flows as a ‘forced exodus’. This resulted, particularly in southern Italy, in impoverishment and a depletion of human resources in favour of a ‘zero cost enrichment’ of the countries of immigration (Ricci Reference Ricci2016; Spatolisano Reference Spatolisano2012). This rigorous Marxist interpretation of the national and international migration phenomenon therefore saw the flows of labour as a consubstantial part of the Western capitalist and ‘imperialist’ political and economic system, in which the ‘strong’ economies operated a process of colonisation and exploitation. In order to counter this process – this, in essence, is the basic and main idea – Italian workers who emigrated abroad, together with their families who remained in Italy, should show solidarity with the international democratic movement and form a real ‘unity’ of programmes and intentions.Footnote 5
On this theoretical basis, the FILEF organised its first National Assembly, which was held on 21 December 1967 at the Teatro Centrale in Rome.Footnote 6 In an inspiring opening speech, Levi recalled the motivations behind the birth of a new democratic organisation, which was intended not only to be of mere assistance ‘for migrants’, but had to be ‘made of migrants’. In other words, it should become a new ‘democratic organism’, within which workers outside Italy and their families at home could participate directly in the decision-making processes, becoming – to all intents and purposes – the real ‘protagonists’ of the migratory processes and dynamics on national and international level.Footnote 7 The constitutive assembly in Rome was attended by several delegations of migrant workers’ associations, including the delegation of the FCLIS (Federation of the Free Italian Colonies) from Switzerland, the association ‘Leonardo Da Vinci’ of Seraing/Liege (Belgium), AFI (Amicale Franco-Italienne) and the Italian-Belgian Friendship of Limburg, together with representatives of the Italian-Belgian cultural and recreational associations of Borinage and Charleroi. In addition to these associations, as mentioned in an article in L'Unità of 29 December 1967, there were also numerous ordinary Italian workers (mainly workers from Belgian and German steel and metallurgical industries), representatives of the CGIL (Confederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro), representatives of INCA (Istituto Nazionale Confederazione di Assistenza) and other democratic associations, including UDI (Union of Italian Women).Footnote 8 The participation of these delegations demonstrates, on the one hand, the openness of the Federation – already at the very beginning of its existence – to the actors of civil society and of the labour movement. On the other hand, it is evidence of the existence of connections and networks of inter-personal relationships and contacts, which pre-existed at the very foundation of the FILEF and operated in a network connected with the PCI and, more generally, with the world of migrant associations, in particular in the Benelux countries, Switzerland and Germany.Footnote 9
The publication of the official bulletin of the Federation, simply called Emigrazione, began in November 1968.Footnote 10 The magazine, distributed on the basis of monthly subscription within the clubs and member associations, was intended to be a ‘permanent instrument’ that could give ‘voice’ to Italian emigrants and become a place of ‘autonomous expression’ of their problems and the injustices they were suffering at their workplace and in their social lives.Footnote 11 Only two years later the FILEF was already organising its second national conference, held in Rome at the Teatro Capranica.Footnote 12 Similarly to what had happened two years earlier, there was a large participation of diverse Italian migrants’ associations, politicians and trade unionists.Footnote 13 The main result of the second assembly was to define, in a more precise way, the programmatic objectives and the reforms to be realised both in Italy and abroad. Among the various and numerous points that can be deduced from analysis of the documents, there were above all the reform of the European social fund for professional qualification; the teaching of Italian language and culture to the entire community of emigrants in public schools; the reform of assistance and welfare and the respect of employment contracts; a social housing programme in favour of Italians returning after their period of work abroad; and the recognition of the autonomous representations of emigrants at embassies and consulates, as well as a greater propensity for the recognition of associations as instruments of socialisation, participation and protection of emigrant workers.Footnote 14 These points essentially constituted the backbone of the political and congressional activity of the FILEF throughout the 1970s.
The definition of the action programmes mentioned above, the implementation of projects at local and national level, were the result both of the decisions taken in Rome by the FILEF presidency – which followed precise political action strategies – and of a coordination of ideas and know-how which took place within the FILEF network in Italy and abroad. This happened on the one hand through collaboration with the Italian regions, which, starting from 1970, obtained greater constitutional autonomy and competence in the field of emigration and immigration (Colucci and Sanfilippo Reference Colucci and Sanfilippo2010, 28; Tintori Reference Tintori, Ben-Ghiat and Hom2016, 115), on the other hand, through working groups, round tables and meetings with representatives of political parties (in particular the PCI), the welfare network (INCA/CGIL), the ACLI (Christian Associations of Italian Workers) and the (newly established) associations of migrant workers with a regional basis, such as the USEF (Sicilian Union of Emigrants and Families) and especially the ALEF (Association of Friulian Emigrant Workers).Footnote 15 Outside Italy, from 1971–4, there were an increasing number of memberships of pre-existing Italian local associations, cultural and recreational clubs, which gradually became part of the FILEF network. As far as Belgium is concerned, the FILEF activity was immediately linked to that of the important non-profit association ‘Leonardo Da Vinci’, active since the 1960s in the area of Seraing/Liège (Caruso Reference Caruso2019, 340; Carta Reference Carta2011, 250; Canovi Reference Canovi2011, 12). In France the diffusion of the Italian regional associations took place in the Lorraine area, in the north of Pas-de-Calais, and in Paris and Lyon, and took shape in the so-called ‘Amicale Franco-Italienne’, which gradually joined the FILEF (Palidda Reference Palidda2005). In the Federal Republic of Germany, in the first half of the 1970s, the ‘Circolo Rinascita’ in Munich (Prontera Reference Prontera, Baumeister, Bonomo and Schott2017, 158; Reference Prontera, Eymond and Heusler2018, 34–41), the ‘Circolo ARCES’ in Stuttgart (Lotterer Reference Lotterer, Deigendesch and Müller2014), the “Circolo Di Vittorio” in Frankfurt am Main (Schöneberg Reference Schoeneberg1993) joined the FILEF. In addition, following the first German FILEF congress held in Frankfurt in March 1970, the FILEF-Germany headquarters was established in Cologne.Footnote 16 At the same time, the FILEF co-organised significant international conferences during the 1970s. The first one was held in Amsterdam from 22 to 26 August 1971 on the initiative of the Anne Frank Foundation as part of the initiatives promoted by the UN, which had proclaimed 1971 the International Year against Racial Discrimination.Footnote 17 The second was held in Wageningen (22–24 November 1974)Footnote 18 and the third in Turin from 28 to 29 May 1977.Footnote 19
The FILEF ‘White Paper’: the proposal for an ‘International Statute on the Rights of Migrant Workers’
The above-mentioned transnational network constituted the socio-political space in which the debate on the issue of the human rights of migrant workers developed during the 1970s. This topic was a fundamental part of the statutory and programmatic aims of the FILEF.Footnote 20 From 1968 onwards, also as a consequence of the increasing diffusion of the official bulletin Emigrazione among Italian communities abroad, the social, political and civil rights of workers occupied an increasing space, especially in the meetings of local Italian migrants’ associations. These associations began to send the first reports of abuse, injustice and discrimination against Italian workers to the FILEF presidency in Rome. In the majority of the cases, these were letters of complaint, petitions and reports from Italian workers, especially those employed in the large metallurgic, steel and automotive industries in the Federal Republic of Germany. The actual dossiers, which were then published in the bulletin, highlighted both the poor hygienic and sanitary conditions of the so-called ‘Baracken’ (the lodgings made available for the guest-workers by German companies) and the various forms of marginalisation, discrimination, ghettoisation and social confinement (‘Unterschichtung’), including episodes of real racism against Italian workers (Kammerer Reference Kammerer, Ostow and Fijalkowski1991 and Reference Kammerer2005; Richter and Richter Reference Richter and Richter2012, 45–59; Zölls Reference Zölls2019, 101–04; Pugliese Reference Pugliese, Carchedi and Pugliese2006). This issue immediately became the centre of the political initiatives of the FILEF presidency. Already in 1969, in fact, Carlo Levi had started a parliamentary question to the Senate of the Republic in Rome (Battiston Reference Battiston2012, 21).Footnote 21 It was a proposal to launch a parliamentary inquiry with two main aims: to analyse more closely the serious problems mentioned above, and to intervene more decisively in the composition of the Committee of Italians Abroad, which the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs had formed in the preceding years in order to support the Italian communities abroad.Footnote 22
At the same time, in 1970, the FILEF began to write a draft petition to be submitted to the European Parliament (hereafter EP) and the Commission of the European Economic Communities (hereafter Commission), to which a proposal for a ‘Statute on the rights of migrant workers’ was attached.Footnote 23 The so-called ‘White Paper’ on the condition of migrant workers in the Community area was presented for the first time on 23 November 1970 at the EP in Luxembourg. The proposal was submitted in the form of a petition (n. 4/70) with the subject ‘Improvement of the situation of Italian emigrants in the Community and adoption of a European statute for emigrant workers’ and was signed by Gaetano Volpe and Paolo Cinanni, both members of the FILEF presidency.Footnote 24 The ‘White Paper’ is divided into several parts. The first part summarises the general characteristics and problems of economic migration in Europe. The second part, more specifically, deals with the living and working conditions of migrant workers: the workplace, social life, vocational training, relations with the native society and the authorities. This part also lists many of the direct witness accounts of Italian workers abroad and some of the complaint files collected by the FILEF in the previous months. The third part sets out the measures to be taken to ensure broader equality of treatment and greater participation of Italian migrants in the societies of arrival, as well as proposals to end the so-called ‘exodus of labour’ from Italy. In a fourth and final part, several social security problems related to the migration phenomenon are listed.Footnote 25
The fundamental part of the ‘White Paper’ was actually the analysis of Regulation (EEC) No. 1612/68 of the European Council of 15 October 1968 on the freedom of movement for workers within the Community area.Footnote 26 The criticism that the FILEF levelled at the Regulation was not against its substance, since large parts of the Regulation formally guaranteed equal rights to work, wages and social security treatment for domestic and foreign workers in the EEC. For the FILEF the problem was that these principles were in reality not fully respected by the countries of immigration, since ‘national or regional legislation’ prevailed over them.Footnote 27 In other words: while the Regulation guaranteed the principles of freedom of movement of labour in the EEC, it did not, however – according to the FILEF – provide the necessary legislative instruments that could remove the obstacles to the effective improvement of workers’ conditions. For the FILEF, the free movement of labour was not to be understood only in the sense of offering workers new economic opportunities in the EEC area. It was also supposed to provide for new, efficient actions to equalise social and welfare treatment for immigrant workers, to facilitate finding accommodation and, above all, to guarantee the exercise of civil and political rights. These requests were summarised in six points: 1) the modification of the EEC's regulation on the free movement of workers; 2) the extension of the measures on schooling to all the children of emigrant workers; 3) the effective reform and adjustment of the European Social Fund; 4) the extension of the rights and structures of participation of emigrants; 5) the adoption of an Italian regulation and an international statute for the rights of migrant workers; 6) the unification and improvement of legislation on social security.Footnote 28 In the view of the FILEF the realisation of these points could only be achieved through a full participation of migrant workers in the decision-making processes regarding migration. Such participation was to be considered not only in terms of voting rights, but also as a greater participation by migrant workers in municipal and regional forms of associations (e.g. through the opening of membership in cultural circles, trade unions and political parties).Footnote 29
According to the FILEF, a substantial modification of the Community regulation was therefore necessary. It had to be realised through the separation of the European regulations regarding the modalities of recruitment of foreign labour in the EEC from the normative apparatuses that aimed to regulate and facilitate the life of migrant workers in the arrival societies. The FILEF proposed, in short, a European and international legislation that was meant to have ‘power of law’ in all EEC countries and be valid for ‘all migrant workers’ living in the European Community. The intention of the FILEF was to eliminate the differentiation between ‘Community workers’ and ‘non-Community workers’ in the 1968 Regulation:
The Regulation must lay down measures to prevent restructuring processes representing a disqualification for migrants, and therefore cannot provide the so-called priority for workers from Member States, which is not even respected. Equality must extend to all workers in a unitary process of common and continuous progress, without distinction of nationality.Footnote 30
On the basis of the documents submitted, the reasons given and the urgency with which the petition was submitted, the EP began an initial internal discussion as early as 19 January 1971, instructing the Social and Health Committee to carry out further investigation and verification on the discriminatory and exploitative cases brought up in the FILEF's petitions and reports. Once a rapporteur had been appointed by the EP in the person of Alfred Califice, the Committee organised a meeting in Rome at the end of April 1971 with representatives of the FILEF and other national Italian workers’ organisations, including ACLI, UNAIE (National Union of Immigrant and Emigrant Associations), the catholic UCEI (Central Office for Italian Emigration), as well as some observers and representatives of Italian trade unions (especially the CGIL, Italian General Confederation of Labour).Footnote 31
At the meeting in Rome, which was attended by other members of the European Commission (including Albert Coppè), the secretary of the FILEF, Gaetano Volpe, summarised the main proposals of the ‘Statute’, insisting particularly on two points: the improvement of the EEC Regulation to ensure effective equality of treatment between EEC and non-EEC workers by unifying and improving social security legislation and by extending the participation possibilities for migrants, especially the right to vote and the right of association.Footnote 32 Both these points were basically supported by the representatives of the European Commission present at the meeting. In fact, during the discussion they made explicit mention of an important document written by the Commission and entitled ‘Preliminary guidelines for a Community social policy programme’. It had been developed at the beginning of the year and already submitted for validation by the EP.Footnote 33 In this document, the Commission listed the measures needed to improve the European policy on migrant workers, which urgently needed to be adapted to cope with the changing patterns of European migration. At the beginning of the 1970s, in fact, the flows of EU workers within the EEC area were clearly decreasing, while the arrivals of migrant workers from so-called ‘third countries’ (i.e. European countries which were not part of the EEC and non-European countries such as Turkey or North African countries) were increasing. According to the Commission this evolution of the immigration dynamics in the EEC area entailed a series of ‘new’ problems for the EEC institutions and their migration governance. The arrival of labourers from non-EEC countries, whose habits, customs and traditions were very distant and different from those of Europe, could increase the difficulties of adaptation in the societies of arrival and, consequently, the risk of social conflicts with the local workers.Footnote 34 The Commission declared itself ready to monitor the application of the rules with regard to the movement of workers (especially those from the ‘third countries’).Footnote 35
Paolo Cinanni also referred to this same document in an article in the FILEF bulletin Emigrazione published in June. While positively assessing the Commission's efforts, he nevertheless still saw in the document a ‘dangerous discrimination’ between EEC and non-EEC labourers:
… [I]n order to have a truly integrated labour market, all discrimination and differences in treatment must be eliminated. But the Commission document itself speaks instead of ‘Community preference in the recruitment of workers’, and proposes to ‘extend in stages the benefits of Community workers to all immigrant labour forces in the Community, starting with workers from the associated countries’. Here is the labour market divided into local workers; Community and non-Community workers: Community and ‘associated’ workers; ‘seasonal’ and ‘frontier workers’, etc. Yet workers provide the same work: for it, everyone is entitled, in relation to the time of employment, to the same treatment.Footnote 36
Behind this line of argumentation we recognise, in fact, not only a clear willingness to overcome the 1968 Regulation through the elimination of any legal and socio-economic differentiation between national and migrant manpower, but also the overcoming of the criterion of ‘nationality’ as a legislative, normative and governmental reference point to manage the circulation of labour within the EEC countries. The following passage helps us to better understand Cinanni's view:
But even for this, to be able to unite all working forces, of whatever nationality, for the achievement of these general aims, it is necessary to fight for the more immediate aims of the workers, on the basis of a platform of claims which embrace the aspirations of everyone to improve their own conditions of work and life. With the unification within the EEC – of the legislation of labour to secure for all workers the same rights …. With the adoption of a ‘Statute of migrant workers’ so that they will have legal rights in all the countries of the Community and guarantees to all without distinction of that most essential equality of treatment; with the full recognition of all the rights of a human being, who must be able to develop in all freedom according to his own abilities, taking into account the level reached by technical and scientific progress and the new relations between the social powers struggling in a united Europe.Footnote 37
After the first months of public debate, the FILEF proposal was finally discussed by the EP at its sitting of 21 September 1971. The speeches of the Members of the EP (hereafter MEPs) show, on the one hand, almost unanimous support for an initiative which was indeed considered a step forward in the European and international debate on the living and working conditions for many migrants in Europe.Footnote 38 On the other hand, however, the basic dilemma of the proposal became evident. This was connected to the jurisdictional form to be given to an international Statute, which – at least in its theoretical formulations – clashed with Community regulations. It was Alfred Coppè, the European Commissioner for Jobs and Social Rights, who had already attended the meetings in Rome, who underlined this difficulty. On the one side, he pointed out, the Commission was trying to find a solution in order to achieve ‘equal treatment for all migrant workers, whether they belong to the Community or to third countries’. On the other side, he stressed that this would be done accordingly with the so-called ‘Community preferential clause’ foreseen in the 1968 Regulation, which already provided a series of protections concerning not only the modalities of recruiting, but also social protection and the defence of civil rights.Footnote 39 Coppè firmly reiterates that this part of the Regulation would not be called into question.Footnote 40 Taking into account this ‘preferential clause’, Coppè gave an assurance, however, that the Commission would proceed in two ways. First, it would commission empirical studies to shed light on the complaints brought forward by the FILEF, and second it would cooperate directly with migrants’ associations, especially with the ‘Italian migrant workers’, to solve ‘all the issues of concern to them’. On these conclusions and partial promises guaranteed by the Commission, the motion for a resolution was adopted by the EP.Footnote 41 In the following months the Commission asked a professor at the University of Louvain (Belgium) to draw up a socio-scientific study on the condition of migrant workers in the Community area. However, this study was not followed by other significant initiatives of the Commission and the issue was temporarily shelved.Footnote 42
The matter would have to wait until May 1973 before it was taken up and brought to attention again. The FILEF – after a lively conference period both in Italy and in the West European countries of immigrationFootnote 43 – presented (for the second time) a petition for an international Statute of migrant workers’ rights to the EP. Concurrently, one year later, the UNAIE also presented a petition to the EP which contained a very similar proposal for a ‘European’, not ‘international’, statute of rights for migrant workers.Footnote 44
The petition was analysed in March 1974 by the European Committee on Social Affairs and Employment and a very detailed report was written by Egbert Wieldraaijer (European Socialist Group).Footnote 45 In addition to stressing, in a very critical way, the delays of the Commission with regard to a topic considered of central importance for European politics, Wieldraaijer indicated the proposal for an ‘international’ statute by the FILEF as the resolution to be preferred over the UNAIE proposal. Even if the latter would have had fewer legal obstacles because of its similarity to the existing EEC Regulation, there was no doubt for him that a Charter of migrant workers’ rights ‘should be drawn up as soon as possible to protect all foreign workers, regardless of their nationality’. His arguments were basically fourfold. First of all, he recalled that the emigration of the labour force from EEC countries (such as Italy) was progressively decreasing, while the number of non-Community workers entering the EEC was growing. Secondly, Community emigrants were already protected, at least in part, by the 1968 Regulation, especially regarding social security and civil rights. Thirdly, the integration of Community migrant workers was ‘relatively easier’ than that of workers of Turkish or North African origin, who were facing often insurmountable barriers of language, customs and religion. Finally, according to Wildraaijer, it was ‘unfair to create further discrimination between EEC workers and workers from third countries’.Footnote 46 The second motion for a resolution was therefore discussed and approved by the EP at its sitting on 12 June 1974.Footnote 47
In the following months, the FILEF intensified its efforts to take forward the Charter proposal. In particular, there was a unity of intent and a close collaboration between the three main Italian migrant organisations (FILEF, ACLI and UNAIE) and a series of meetings and appointments that sealed this alliance. The first important occasion to demonstrate this ‘unity of intent’ around the FILEF proposal was the European Congress of Italian Emigration, held in Brussels from 22 to 24 July 1974.Footnote 48 The congress was attended by more than 27 representatives of Italian organisations, including mainly ACLI, UNAIE and ALEF, but also trade unions and various Italian political parties. The meeting was also attended by Luigi Girardin, member of the Committee on Social Affairs and Employment of the EP. In his speech, he emphasised the efforts of the European Commission, which was working on the definition of a ‘Statute’ for the rights of the emigrant ‘following the presentation of proposals made by the two main organisations of emigrants in the European ambit, the FILEF and the UNAIE’. According to Girardin, the Committee on Social Affairs and Employment was already working on a Report regarding the Social Action Programme submitted by the Commission to the European Council (Doc. 216/73) in which a large part of the programme was dedicated to the measures to be taken for a real improvement of the working and living conditions for ‘all migrant workers’ and their families, combined with a community action programme and a coordination of the immigration policies of the member states with regard to third countries.Footnote 49 Furthermore, Girardin recalled that, similarly to what had happened two years earlier (the first meeting in Rome), a further meeting between representatives of the European institutions and those from the Italian associations would be held in Rome as early as October 1974 in order to come to a unanimous decision regarding the juridical form to be given to the ‘Statute’. In this sense he invited the organisations to clarify whether the Charter should be defined in an ‘international’ way or be valid only for EEC workers.Footnote 50
The official response by the FILEF was not long in coming. In his speech at the second congress on international migration, held in Wageningen in 1974, Cinanni firmly reiterated the importance of an international Statute that would guarantee the rights ‘to all workers’ and could serve as an instrument of legal protection for migrant workers and as a basis for common international policies for trade unions and the working class in the defence of labour rights. Cinanni's argumentation followed the same lines that Wieldraaijer had pursued in his report in March 1974:
Even the European Committee on Social Affairs and Employment declares … that preference should be given to a Charter applying to all foreign citizens residing in the Community, and not only to the citizens of member states of the EEC, exactly because the number of emigrants from other countries is by far greater, because the emigrants from EEC member states are already better protected and because it is unjust to create discrimination between workers from EEC member states and workers from other countries.Footnote 51
The FILEF's position became more precise during the meeting between the EEC representatives, the Italian government and trade unions and migrants’ organisations, already announced by Luigi Girardin in the July Assembly and held in Rome in October 1974 in the Chamber of Deputies.Footnote 52 In the discussion, the FILEF firmly returned to the issue of discrimination in European regulations and the differentiation between EEC and non-EEC labourers, stressing that the lack of satisfactory European migration policies was linked to ‘structural deficiencies and legislative gaps’ related to a European political system which considered only economic interests to be of primary importance, without looking at rights of migrant workers and the rights of the weakest:
The FILEF has never accepted the so-called ‘Community clause’, which would mean ‘discrimination’ for non-EEC workers and ultimately also for other workers. When workers are divided, however, they only serve the interests of the economically dominant classes. In general, Europe cannot be made by preserving what is there, but by working to unite the labour forces that want reforms and are capable of contributing to them, for a real civilisation and humanity, and to heal the crisis that comes out of the way Europe has been conceived so far. … One thing is certain about the location of emigrants in Europe (EEC or non-EEC): a European construction that places emigrants at the lowest levels cannot be considered. The Community has found that, for example, in Germany only 2 per cent of emigrants have obtained a qualification, and only 3 per cent have specialised; that emigrants have cooperated to achieve high levels of economic expansion and have had few opportunities for progress; that non-EEC nationals are the main victims of existing discrimination; that emigrants are generally excluded from social benefits and from the management of public activities and services.Footnote 53
As we can see, the FILEF strongly reaffirmed its preference for an ‘international Statute’ for migrant workers and called on the EC Commission to act accordingly.Footnote 54 The intense season of debates, conventions, congresses and conferences, which – as we have seen – developed throughout the summer and autumn of 1974, did not take long to bear fruit. At the end of the year, in fact, the Commission confirmed its intention to implement action programmes in favour of migrant workers and their families. A Commission information memo (P-85/74) lists two major goals. First, to ensure equal treatment of Community and non-Community labourers (especially regarding the payment of family allowances for children who remained in the country of origin). Second, to assure a series of measures to be realised ‘by 1980’ which would improve the political rights at municipal level by the setting up of a system of consultative organisations which could ensure a voice for migrants’ decisions taken at local level. In this sense, the Commission envisaged a very precise plan and several measures. They included, for Community nationals, the introduction of a uniform system for the payment of family benefits, which was to be gradually extended to third-country nationals. At the same time, the Commission also planned to introduce vocational training and language courses and implement social services for migrants through a housing financing scheme.Footnote 55
After this – at least initial and partial – acknowledgement by the Commission to adopt appropriate measures to overcome the discrimination and injustice suffered by migrant workers at Community level, the FILEF began, in the following years, to strengthen the partnership formed with other organisations of Italian migrants abroad. This led to the First National Conference on Emigration, held in Rome in March 1975,Footnote 56 and to the third international congress on migration, co-organised by the FILEF and held in Turin in 1977.Footnote 57 The main result of the latter was the creation of an International Committee for Migration in Europe. One of the objectives of the Committee was to carry out a ‘democratic action’ involving not only ethnic organisations of immigrant workers and local trade unions, but also collaborating directly with the European institutions, taking part in the decision-making processes related to the EEC migration policy. This is how Paolo Cinanni, elected chairman of the Committee, expressed himself at the end of the congress proceedings:
In order to carry out this action of ours in a continuous and coordinated manner, the Promoter Committee puts forward the proposal that at the end of its work, this Third Congress of ours should appoint an International Committee for information and coordination of our common action in Europe, which, as its first commitment, will promote a number of meetings with the authorities of the EEC Commission, the EP … in order to arrive – with their collaboration – at a conference on labour immigration in European countries, similar to the one held in Italy in 1975, which launched an interesting process of participation of the workers concerned, aiming at the self-management of the organisms of our emigration.Footnote 58
The Committee, made up of representatives of large international ‘umbrella’ migrant organisations, met every six months at the EEC institutions in Brussels and Luxembourg and over the following two years from 1977 to 1979 developed a very concrete programme of action concerning the granting of ‘European citizenship’ rights also to EEC and non-EEC workers (who had been permanently resident in one of the EEC countries for at least two years). The Committee also worked on the project for the adoption of a European law for the right to vote for local authorities for all residents, including immigrant workers and their families. At the end of 1979 the activities of the European Committee on Emigration led, for the third (and last) time, to the submission of a proposal for a FILEF Statute to the EP.Footnote 59 In November, Paolo Cinanni wrote directly to the President of the EP, Simone Veil. In his letter Cinanni called on the EP to take up the question of the international Statute and, at the same time, to include representatives of the European Emigration Committee in the social European institutions, to provide them with a seat in the secretariat and also with a ‘financial contribution for the very functioning of the Committee’. Indeed, on 13 November, Veil agreed to meet the representatives of the Committee. Two days later, on 15 November, the motion for a resolution was submitted to the EP.Footnote 60
Unlike the first two petitions, there was no discussion in the EP in this case, because in the same year two other petitions – on a very similar subject and presented by the two major parliamentary groups (Christian Democrats and Socialists) – were discussed and voted on.Footnote 61 The greater interest of a growing number of MEPs in the matter regarding the rights of migrants, as well as the fact that this time it was not an external non-governmental organisation that tabled motions for resolutions, but MEPs themselves, led to a certain acceleration of the decision-making process in the European institutions in Luxemburg and Brussels. Two important documents are evidence of this trend, a consultation held in 1979 and a dossier of 1980. In both documents, the Commission was clearly required to ensure the free movement of Community migrant workers, to stimulate the coordination of national policies on migrants from third countries, to promote the abolition of discrimination in the workplace and to adopt specific social and educational measures for all migrant workers in the EEC area, regardless of their country of origin (Gilardoni, D'Odorico and Carrillo Reference Gilardoni, D'Odorico and Carrillo2015, 29). Finally, in 1981 the Committee also accepted some of the proposals contained in the two petitions mentioned above, recognising the juridical and legal practicability of overcoming excessive distinctions and differentiation between EEC and non-EEC workers, especially regarding social and civil rights.Footnote 62 In the ‘Report drawn up on behalf of the Committee on Social Affairs and Employment on the problem of migrant workers’, reference was made above all to the possibility of drawing up specific and differentiated texts on the ‘rights of EU migrant workers’. At the same time, the report recognises that it was necessary to envisage a gradual incorporation of ‘non-EEC migrants with regard to certain portions of rights and duties’. The measures would therefore explicitly ensure the extension of the rights ‘laid down in Regulation 1612/68 and the subsequent amendments and additions to it, in respect of the free movement of workers from third countries, following a specified period of legal residence in a Member State’.Footnote 63
Although the Committee on Legal Affairs did not directly refer to the proposals of the FILEF and the ‘White Paper’, the Italian Federation interpreted these decisions as a significant recognition of the efforts made in the 1970s and as a ‘great achievement’, particularly with regard to equality between workers from EEC and non-EEC countries, which had been the most problematic legal issue for a whole decade.Footnote 64 For the FILEF the recognition of this achievement and the openness of the EP towards a progressive legal equalisation of all migrant workers present in the Community, without considering their origin, represented a decisive step forward towards the construction of a fairer, more equitable and solidarity-based Europe, in which migrants were considered no longer as second-class citizens but as an integral part of European civil society. During the 1980s, the FILEF did not officially submit any other petition. However, the Federation continued to play a central role in the European debate about migrant workers’ rights, on the one hand through close cooperation and common projects with single MEPsFootnote 65 and on the other, continuing its role as coordinator within the transnational network of migrants’ organisations. It became increasingly active in international and European Committees and, since the mid-1980s, increasingly involved in the management of ‘second generation’ migration issues, such as assistance for political asylum seekers and war refugees, schooling problems for first generation migrants’ children, and family reunions (Ireland Reference Ireland1991, 477–8). In Italy, too, throughout the second half of the 1980s and the early 1990s the FILEF was involved in integration and inclusion projects for foreigners in Italy, a growing challenge for both national and regional policies (Pugliese Reference Pugliese, Cesarani and Fulbrook1996 and Reference Pugliese2000; Bonifazi Reference Bonifazi2005, 31). At the same time, the FILEF was also affected, like other Italian ‘national’ migrants’ organisations, by the profound transformation that affected the world of Italian migrant associations. A change linked to the democratisation processes within the Italian consular network, started with the founding of the official Committees of Italians Abroad (COMITES) in the mid-1980s and continued with the formation of the General Council of Italians Abroad (CGIE), a consequence of the Italian migratory agenda resulting from the Second National Conference of Emigration held in Rome in 1988 (Tintori Reference Tintori, Ben-Ghiat and Hom2016, 115). The new assistance channels for citizens living abroad, related to new migratory policies introduced by the Italian government at the beginning of the 1990s, the global social and economic changes and the evolution of the Italian emigration networks in a not necessarily association-based sense, determined a deep downsizing of the FILEF network and a general de-politicisation of the numerous initiatives still in progress with other actors of civil society.
Conclusion
With its proposed ‘Statute’ the FILEF intended to be fully involved in the debate on the human, civil and social rights of Italian migrant workers abroad. Through the promotion and coordination of round-table panels, meetings and working groups with the EEC institutions and thanks to its associative networks, the FILEF carried out, throughout the 1970s, an action of ‘political brokerage’, integrating and bringing together different social and political actors, in order to reach the common objective of a legislation aiming at respecting and safeguarding the human rights of migrant workers in the European Community. The FILEF developed not only concrete policies of common action, but also a strategic framework that could serve as a guideline to reform the existing immigration legislation in the EEC. In order to see to what extent the European Commission, particularly in the 1980s, was inspired by the proposals that the FILEF, over a whole decade, presented to the European Parliament, further studies of a historical-legal nature should certainly be carried out. Such studies go beyond the present work, which was focused more specifically on the perspective of the FILEF.
On the basis of the analysis made we are in any case able to identify two aspects, which are, in my opinion, fundamental to the understanding of the transnational political activity of the FILEF. First: although it was mainly the members of the presidency – in particular Cinanni – who carried out precise political and organisational strategies to ensure that the proposal was discussed both by the European institutions and at important international meetings and congresses, it would be misleading to see the ‘White Paper’ as an elitist or oligarchic initiative of the few members of the presidency. On the contrary, the ‘Statute’ proposal should necessarily be understood as the result of an intense debate open to contributions from the entire network of the FILEF. This established a dialogue about the proposal which was intended to involve, as democratically as possible, the Italian and European labour movement, trade unions and civil society. This debate developed, as we have seen, in two main ways. On the one hand, it was conducted through a systematic co-operation with the EEC institutions, which took place in various gatherings, meetings and round tables, in order to define which legislative form should be given to the Statute. On the other hand, it took shape through the partnership between FILEF, UNAIE and ACLI, particularly in the second half of the 1970s and aimed to overcome the ideological and political obstacles in order to find practical solutions for the problems of Italian workers and their families. Second: the speeches and writings of Paolo Cinanni show that, at the basis of the FILEF proposals for an International Statute for Migrant Rights, there was a precise vision of a ‘united Europe’. The strong criticism of the so-called ‘preferential clause’ of the Regulation 1612/68, the proposals for wage and social security equalisation between EEC and non-EEC workers, as well as the overcoming of ‘nationality’ as a normative category on which to base the Community legislative apparatus in the field of migration imply, de facto, a profound reform of the political structure of the EEC, in particular from the point of view of social policies and in relation to the defence of human rights. Cinanni's ‘Europe’ is a ‘Europe’ in which migrant workers are at the centre of a process of democratisation of state and supranational structures and this process could be implemented only through a real political participation of migrant workers and their involvement in associations and organisations. The main example is the creating of an International Committee for Migration in Europe (formed by the FILEF and other organisations during the three International Congresses on Migration in 1971, 1974 and 1977) which would support the EEC institutions in all aspects of migration policy.
This second aspect, especially, should be further investigated. As places of political activism and social commitment – where programmes were debated, knowledge and know-how shared, action plans developed and cultural and social transfer with Italy cultivated – the Italian organisations of migrant workers were therefore (transnational) spaces of social and political ‘hybridisation’. Further analysis of this facet, if conducted with an urban network and a trans-local approach (Rodger Reference Rodger, Kenny and Madgin2015; Freitag and Oppen Reference Freitag and von Oppen2005), would highlight the central and fundamental role that the Italian local associations, cultural circles and the bigger ‘national’ organisations of migrant workers, such as the FILEF, played in the spreading of discussion, debates and discourses about the European political, social and democratic integration. In this sense, an investigation that also considers the political involvement or the social commitment of individual migrant workers as an integral part of the migratory experience will allow a better understanding of the possible paths of redefinition and the emergence of an (individual or even collective) ‘national’ and/or ‘European identity’ among the first Italian ‘guest workers’ and their families (Sala Reference Sala and Oltmer2006; Pichler Reference Pichler, Janz and Sala2011 and Reference Pichler, De Salvo, Priori and Ugolini2014).
Appendix
Archival sources
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Newspaper articles and internet sources
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L'Unità, 1969–71. Link: https://archivio.unita.news/ (last accessed 24 June 2020)
Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 of the Council of 15 October 1968 on freedom of movement for workers within the Community. Link: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/1968/1612/oj/?uri=CELEX:31968R1612 (last accessed 24 June 2020)