- Source: Protest camp
- Occupy London
- Daerah Khusus Ibukota Jakarta
- Kerusuhan Euromaidan Februari 2014
- Pusat Pemulihan Sosial Federal No.1
- Joko Widodo
- Unjuk rasa pro-Palestina di universitas 2024
- Tambora, Jakarta Barat
- Tuapeijat, Sipora Utara, Kepulauan Mentawai
- Sekolah Tinggi Teologi SAAT
- Perang Kemerdekaan Irlandia
- Protest camp
- Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp
- Gdeim Izik protest camp
- Dakota Access Pipeline protests
- Euromaidan
- 2024 Georgian post-election protests
- Occupy movement
- 2024 pro-Palestinian protests on university campuses
- Camp
- Camp Beagle
A protest camp or protest encampment (or just encampment) is a physical camp that is set up by activists, to either provide a base for protest, or to delay, obstruct or prevent the focus of their protest by physically blocking it with the camp. A protest camp may also have a symbolic or reproductive component where 'protest campers' try and recreate their desired worlds through the enactment of protest camp infrastructures (such as communal kitchens, child care, environmentally friendly composting toilet or use of grey water systems) or through the modes of organising and governance (e.g. direct democracy).
Camping on and/or occupying land has a long history which can be traced back to nomadic cultures as well as the 17th century Diggers. However, the use of protest camps as a contemporary form of protest can be linked back to the US civil rights movement of the 1960s and, specifically, "Resurrection City", a protest camp held in May 1968 in Washington, D.C. as part of the Poor People's Campaign. In the United Kingdom publicity around the 1982 Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp in England put protest camps in the public imagination. Since then the practice of protest camping has and continues to be used by many social movements around the world.
See also
Camp for Climate Action
Camp Stupid
Gdeim Izik protest camp
Occupation (protest)
Occupy movement
Peace camp
Poor People's Campaign
Rossport Solidarity Camp
References
External links
Protest Camps research project