There is currently no text in this page. You can search for this page title in other pages, or search the related logs, but you do not have permission to create this page.
Category:Tsm’syen Law
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Pages in category "Tsm’syen Law"
The following 113 pages are in this category, out of 113 total.
A
- Access to records may be guided or limited.
- Accountability extends beyond the present.
- Accuracy and restraint preserve integrity.
- Actions must preserve options for those who follow.
- Adaawx guide lawful use and decision-making.
- Adaawx record boundaries, histories, and events tied to laxyuup
- Authority is exercised in trust, not ownership.
- Authority over laxyuup arises from ayaawx.
- Ayaawx and adaawx must be passed intact.
- Ayaawx guides acceptable forms of acknowledgment and repair
C
- Clan and Nation law govern shared or overlapping lands
- Collective responsibility reinforces accountability
- Compensation and repair are addressed at the house level
- Context determines lawful use.
- Context includes speaker, place, time, and purpose.
- Context must accompany all records.
- Continuity depends on careful preservation.
- Correct restraint strengthens long-term governance.
- Corrections strengthen accuracy.
- Current decision-makers act as temporary holders.
D
E
F
H
I
L
- Lack of witness limits standing.
- Land and resources must be preserved for future use.
- Land disputes are addressed through Tsm’syen law
- Land use must align with ayaawx.
- Law endures through care across generations.
- Law endures through correct method.
- Law is judged across generations, not moments.
- Law prioritizes restoration of balance between parties.
- Law survives through continued relationship to land.
- Lawful access preserves trust.
- Lawful engagement depends on mutual recognition and restraint
- Lawful limits preserve balance
- Lawful limits protect those not present.
- Laxyuup is not subject to unilateral alienation.
- Laxyuup must be protected for future generations.
- Loss of law weakens future authority.
- Loss of responsibility weakens authority over land
N
P
- Persistent misuse of land undermines authority
- Present authority carries long-term responsibility.
- Present authority does not include permanent surrender.
- Proper method ensures future understanding.
- Protection of future generations is a lawful obligation.
- Protection of future generations sustains the Nation.
- Protection of laxyuup protects future generations.
- Public availability does not equal unrestricted use.
R
- Recording does not freeze law.
- Recording does not transfer interpretive authority.
- Recording is a support to living law.
- Recording refers to documenting law, memory, or process.
- Recording requires careful attention to accuracy.
- Recording supports continuity; it does not create law.
- Recording supports teaching and learning.
- Records cannot be used to substitute authority.
- Records may be oral, written, visual, or digital.
- Records may be revised to correct errors.
- Records may not be detached from law.
- Records must identify scope and limitations.
- Removal from context risks distortion.
- Resolution must respect the autonomy of all parties involved.
- Resolution prioritizes restoration of balance
- Resolution requires engagement between houses, not unilateral action
- Respect for the law and governance of other peoples is required.
- Responsibility extends beyond individuals to houses.
- Revision does not imply instability of law.