In 1922, some militants who had been active in anarchist circles founded the Brazilian Communist Party (PCB), influenced by the success of the Russian Revolution of 1917 and by the feeling of failure, in appeal and unity, of the syndicalist workers' federations.
José Bové (born 1953), a French farmer and syndicalist, member of the alter-globalization movement
Bulletin international du mouvement syndicaliste (English: International Bulletin of the Syndicalist Movement) was a syndicalist periodical published from 1907 by Christiaan Cornelissen and from 1913 by the International Syndicalist Bureau in Amsterdam.
In 1912, Legien gave a keynote address at the convention of the Socialist Party of America in Indianapolis which was credited with persuading the convention to reject the anarcho-syndicalist program of Bill Haywood.
The Syndicalist Confederation of Intercultural Communities of Bolivia, a Bolivian farmers' union formerly known as the Syndicalist Confederation of Colonizers of Bolivia
It worked hard to recruit people from the left, with some success: notably, Marcel Delagrange, former French Communist Party (PCF) mayor of Périgueux, and the anarcho-syndicalist (and future Vichy Régime minister) Hubert Lagardelle.
Fernand-Léonce-Émile Pelloutier (1 October 1867, Paris – 13 March 1901, Sèvres) was a French anarchist (anarcho-syndicalist).
He eventually drifted away from Bolshevism and became associated with the syndicalist movement of Pierre Monatte.
Meanwhile, the German anarchist movement and the Free Workers' Union of Germany (FAUD), an anarcho-syndicalist trade union Rocker was active in, were waning.
The Siberian Confederation of Labour (Сибирская Конфедерация Труда) or SKT is a Siberian anarcho-syndicalist union, the largest union being in the city of Omsk.
What Mészáros prescribes is a labor union socialist solution, specifically the syndicalist form of socialism that Samuel Gompers had abandoned when the AFL provided the a workforce for the U.S. involvement in World War I.
The Syndicalist Party published a daily newspaper, El Pueblo.
The anger felt by the working-class people of this town boils over when a construction worker, Joe Hill (apparently named after the anarcho-syndicalist labour organiser of the same name) falls to his death due to poor safety standards at the local building site.
Through his travels he was exposed to anarchist-syndicalist philosophies that would influence his later work.