This book offers an innovative analysis of Anishinabegleadership seen ‘from the inside’ and shows the challenges faced by contemporary First Nations leaders. Morissette offers a sympathetic yet insightful analysis of the pressures and contradictions of politics in a fundamentally egalitarian society, reminding us that ‘Native’ societies are not necessarily homogenous nor what we expect them to be.
— Guy Lanoue, Université de Montréal
Thanks to privileged access to political actors and to internal documentation, Morissette here offers an original perspective on Indigenous ‘bottom up’ governance. Afar from institutions, negotiations, and discourses on self-governance, this book reveals with much accuracy the peculiarities and dynamics of everyday political life among the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg. This is where an interstitial leadership takes shape through the cracks in the formal and traditional systems of governance, with all the imaginable ambiguities, contradictions, and paradoxes—where women play an active and empowering role, and where an entire community unfolds its resistance. This book is a welcome addition to the growing and much-needed literature on the Anishinabeg nations in Quebec.
— Claude Gélinas, Université de Sherbrooke
Morissette demolishes assumptions surrounding the inadaptability and rigidity of Indigenous leadership in response to colonialism. In this work, the Kitigan Zibi leaders and community demonstrate an incredible amount of flexibility and adaptability while existing in the gaps or interstitial space created by colonialism. This book will form the basis of future exploration of Indigenous political culture, from Indigenous perspectives, to understand how Indigenous peoples have continued to govern and generate leadership from within. This book is a must-read for scholars in political science, anthropology, history, sociology, and Indigenous studies.
— Karl Hele, Mount Allison University