Absence from the Codex does not negate law
Absence From the Codex Does Not Negate Law Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working
Purpose
This principle clarifies that law does not depend on being recorded in the Codex in order to be valid or operative.
General Principle
Absence from the Codex does not negate law.
Meaning
Law exists wherever it is lived, practiced, witnessed, and recognized by lawful holders — even if it has not been written or entered into the Codex. In legal thought, *lex non scripta* refers to unwritten law — law that exists through custom, practice, and community memory rather than in statutory text. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
A principle, responsibility, or obligation may be deeply present and effective in the community’s legal life without ever having been listed in the Codex.
Implications
Not seeing an item in the Codex does not mean the law does not exist. Many aspects of ayaawk are transmitted through oral history, ceremony, action, and ongoing practice.
Decisions and obligations rooted in practice remain authoritative even if they are not recorded.
Relationship to Authority
Authority remains grounded in lived responsibility, not in documentation alone. Houses, elders, and community holders continue to carry law whether or not it appears in the Codex.
Limits
Although documentation assists clarity and transmission, it is only one form of remembering law. A failure to include something in the Codex should be recognized as a gap in record, not an erasure of law itself.
Continuity
Recognizing unwritten law preserves continuity with older traditions and prevents overreliance on written form. Future generations can learn that absence from the Codex does not mean absence of law.