Toho strikes | |||
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Part of Occupation of Japan | |||
Date | March 20, 1946 – August 19, 1948 | ||
Location | Japan | ||
Methods | Strike, occupation | ||
Resulted in | Strikes ended via police and military intervention | ||
Parties | |||
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The Toho strikes (東宝争議, Tōhō sōgi), also translated as the Toho labor disputes or Toho labor upheaval, were a series of strike actions in Japan taken by workers in the Toho labor union against Toho management between 1946 and 1948. The third and largest action was notable for the union's months-long occupation of the Toho film studio, and their eventual removal by police backed by the United States Army.
The conflict between the union, backed by Sanbetsu, and management, backed by Nikkeiren (later the Japan Business Federation) became "the focus of a nation-wide confrontation between capital and labor," and the union's defeat marked the beginning of a fundamental shift of power from labor in Japan.[1]