Failure to respond may require broader intervention.

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Failure to Respond May Require Broader Intervention Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Purpose This principle explains when matters move beyond the originating house. It preserves order while ensuring that unresolved harm does not spread.

General principle Failure to respond may require broader intervention.

TRIGGER Conditions Broader involvement may arise when: - responsibility is denied, - response is delayed without cause, - acknowledgment is refused, - restoration efforts are avoided.

Unaddressed harm affects more than one house.

AUTHORITY Expansion As impact widens, lawful authority may extend to clan or Nation. Expanded involvement supports restoration, not takeover.

RELATIONSHIP TO HOUSE Continuity The originating house does not lose identity or connection to the matter. Responsibility remains, even when others assist.

PURPOSE OF INTERVENTION Stability Intervention seeks to: - prevent escalation, - protect people and land, - maintain trust in law.

LIMITS Restraint Broader authorities must act carefully and within ayaawx. Assistance must not become replacement.

WITNESS Legitimacy Witnessing records that proper opportunity to respond was given.

See also House-Level Response is Primary Restoration of Balance Jurisdiction