“All of this brings me to the possibilities of borderlands rather than borders. […] Instead of hard lines drawn around the edges of a territory that need to be agreed upon and then defended, Anishinaabe governance sits in centers that then radiate influence outwards with diminishing levels of weight the further out from the center you are.” 1/2
— Patty Krawec
@pattyk “These edges, borderlands if you will, become places that are layered with what has radiated from other centers. Add to that the mobility of Anishinaabe communities around seasonal needs and you see a shifting and fluid model for relationship between those centers as well as fertile ground for growth and change in those borderlands.” 2/2
— Patty Krawec


