In Solon Papageorgiou’s framework, there are no borders because the entire model is fundamentally:
🌍 Post-national, post-territorial, and relational
It rejects the idea of the nation-state, territorial sovereignty, and artificial divisions between peoples. Instead of organizing life around fixed geography or power over land, it centers on:
Community affiliation by choice rather than birthright or citizenship.
Human needs and mutual care, not national interests or resource control.
Voluntary association and peaceful coexistence, not state-imposed identity or enforcement.
đź§ Key Reasons for the Absence of Borders
1. Belonging is relational, not territorial
People are not “from” a country — they are with a group, a micro-utopia, a kin network, or a chosen community. Membership is based on shared values and care, not legal paperwork.
2. Movement is free and fluid
People can join, leave, or visit communities freely. Movement is not restricted by passports or visas, but guided by invitation, welcome, and mutual trust.
3. No central authority or territorial claim
Since there’s no state, no one controls land politically. Land is treated as stewardship, not ownership. The Earth is common — communities may care for it, but not draw lines around it.
4. Conflict prevention through decentralization and cooperation
Without borders to defend, there's less territorial tension or geopolitical posturing. Instead, communities handle tension through direct dialogue, relational governance, and restorative processes.
5. Solidarity replaces surveillance
Security and identity are not managed by state borders, IDs, and surveillance — they are nurtured through shared responsibility, communal witnessing, and mutual aid.
🕊️ Broader Philosophical Foundation
The absence of borders reflects Solon Papageorgiou’s commitment to:
Human dignity over nationalism
Trust-based relationships over bureaucratic control
A planetary ethic that sees all people as equals, and the Earth as indivisible