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noun (Politics) (War and Weaponry) A camp set up by peace campaigners, usually outside a military
establishment , as a long-term protest against the build-up of weapons. Etymology: Formed by compounding: a camp for peace. History and Usage: The peace camp was a phenomenon of the
early eighties, when the campaign
against nuclear weapons in particular was at its height and peace campaigners felt that
their protests had as yet found little response in the actions and policies of the superpowers. In the UK, the name peace camp is particularly associated with the women's camp outside the US airbase at Greenham Common in Berkshire (see
wimmin ), where some campaigners continued to live a decade or more
after the camp was set up in 1981. Soviet newspapers are full of praise for the anti-nuclear activities of the women's peace camps at Greenham Common in Britain and
elsewhere . Economist 15 Mar. 1986, p. 63