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RT @EESC_LiaisonG: 📢 Catch up on
@EU_EESC
2023

👉europa.eu/!VCJfJH

📍Workshop recommendations

📍 Resolution based on our recommendations

📍Photo gallery

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

RT @industriAll_EU: Industry 5.0 is founded on 3 main pillars:
👉🏻human-centric approach that sees workers as an investment
👉🏻sustainable approach with a shift of focus from technology-driven progress to thoroughly human-centric approach
👉🏻 resilient approach with strategic value chains

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

.@EU_EESC must involve civil society from the candidate countries stronger in its daily work; we have to learn from lessons of the past & better prepare their membership in the EU: the Committee's input can be essential in this aspect @oliverroepke at former members meeting

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

RT @EU_EESC: 💡 Bulbs burning out quicker than expected.
☕Coffee makers breaking down too quickly.

This is planned obsolescence and we were the first to address it in 2013.

Back then, we called for a total ban on products with built-in defects designed to prematurely end a product's life.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

📢📢 March is the month of the women! Therefore, the @WorkersEESC continues with the weekly tribute to important women who contributed to the Workers' Rights and Feminist movement.

Today, Clara Campoamor 🇪🇸💜👇🏾👇🏽👇🏼

🧵THREAD🧵

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

RT @EPSUnions: Workers in are on against the reforms of the legal system that would allow the ruling right-wing coalition to intervene in the decisions of judges they disagree with.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

🏫: on 23/24 March @EU_EESC was filled with laughter, joy & enthusiasm!

VP for Communication @CillianLohan met over 100 students from 35 countries in

🗣️We must listen to the . They are the wind of change in 🇪🇺

@youreurope

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/EESC_PRESS/st

10/10 Clara Campoamor's life and work remind us that the struggle for justice and equality is ongoing and that we must work tirelessly toward a better world for all. Her name has baptized theaters, squares, and stations all around Spain.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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9/10 Campoamor once said, "To be a feminist means to be a woman who is free to choose her own destiny, without fear or coercion from men or society."

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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RT @KOZSlovakRep: ⚠️🇸🇰 KOZ SR and @kovo_odbory expresses serious concern and strongly condemns the current events and attacks by the employer (BPC, s.r.o. Beluša) on the Chairman of the OZ KOVO unite in DS Beluša - and at the same time a member of the Council of the OZ KOVO - colleague Miloš…

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

8/10 She continued working in Switzerland as a lawyer, until she lost her eyesight and finally ended up dying because of cancer in 1972. Her body was not allowed to be buried in Spain, but her ashes are nowadays in Guipuzcoa.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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7/10 Despite facing numerous challenges, Campoamor remained committed to social justice and continued to work for women's rights and workers' rights, and it made a great contribution to the development of feminist theory.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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6/10 While in exile, Campoamor continued to speak out against fascism and for human rights, earning recognition and respect from international organizations and leaders.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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5/10 Campoamor's advocacy for women's rights made her a target of harassment and violence, and she was forced to flee Spain during the Spanish Civil War.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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4/10 In her famous speech to the Spanish Parliament in 1931, Campoamor argued passionately for women's right to vote, declaring that "we are not asking for favors, but for justice."

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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3/10 In the early 1930s, Campoamor played a key role in the passage of a law granting Spanish women the right to vote, which had been fiercely opposed by traditionalists and the Catholic Church, among others.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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2/10 Despite growing up in a working-class family and facing numerous obstacles, Campoamor excelled academically and became a lawyer, later using her skills to fight for women's rights.

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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1/10 Born in 1888 in Madrid, Clara Campoamor was one of the most important figures in the Spanish feminist movement of the early 20th century. Her political activism was especially relevant during the Spanish II Republic (1931-1939)

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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📢📢 March is the month of the women! Therefore, the @WorkersEESC continues with the weekly tribute to important women who contributed to the Workers' Rights and Feminist movement.

Today, Clara Campoamor 🇪🇸💜👇🏾👇🏽👇🏼

🧵THREAD🧵

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/WorkersEESC/s

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