International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers

The International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers (ITUCNW) was a section of the Profintern that existed during the late 1920s and 1930s and acted as a radical transnational platform for black workers in Africa and the Atlantic World.

History
It was launched in July 1930 at an "International Conference of Negro Workers" that took place in Hamburg. There were 17 delegates including:
 * Vivian Henry: Trinidad
 * S. M. DeLeon: Jamaica
 * I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson: Sierra Leone
 * Albert Nzula: South Africa
 * Jomo Kenyatta: Kenya
 * Frank Macaulay
 * George Padmore
 * James W. Ford
 * I. Hawkins
 * J. Reid
 * Edward Francis Small: Gambia

It produced a journal, The Negro Worker, which was edited by George Padmore until 1931 and by James W. Ford until 1937 when it ceased publication.