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Showing below up to 50 results in range #901 to #950.
- Excessive or careless use undermines balance. (1 revision)
- Authority connected to specific territory (1 revision)
- Interference Between Houses (1 revision)
- Adaawk Guide Inter House and Inter Tribal Conduct (1 revision)
- Decisions must consider long-term effects. (1 revision)
- Collective defense of law and land is organized (1 revision)
- Role of a Chief (Speaker, Not Ruler) (1 revision)
- Teaching Preserves Legal Understanding (1 revision)
- National response coordinates, rather than replaces, internal authority. (1 revision)
- Elder authority is relational, not positional (1 revision)
- Milton Cloth, Fur, Abalone, Goat Hair (1 revision)
- Sim’oogit Authority Is Tied to Adaawk and Conduct (1 revision)
- Persistent violation undermines relationship and trust. (1 revision)
- Law is strengthened through restraint (1 revision)
- Adaawk Endure Through Care and Use (1 revision)
- Issues may include land, law, protection, or collective response. (1 revision)
- Youth are not excluded from law, but are guided into it (1 revision)
- Crest obligations across all Tsm’syen territories (1 revision)
- Use of a Crest Implies Acceptance of Obligation (1 revision)
- Outcomes do not override ayaawx or house law. (1 revision)
- Preparation does not imply immediate authority (1 revision)
- Protocols between houses and tribes (1 revision)
- Context Must Accompany Any Recorded Crest History (1 revision)
- The National Ayaawk Codex is a collective record of law. (1 revision)
- Repair may include apology, compensation, service, or other appropriate actions. (1 revision)
- Forms of national decision-making under Ayaawx (1 revision)
- Access to the Codex may be guided or limited. (1 revision)
- Trust limits the scope of guidance (1 revision)
- House-specific histories and legal narratives (1 revision)
- Accuracy Protects Both Parties and Witnesses (1 revision)
- The Codex supports transmission to future generations. (1 revision)
- Resolution requires engagement between houses, not unilateral action (1 revision)
- Recording refers to documenting law, memory, or process. (1 revision)
- Mutual recognition preserves unity (1 revision)
- Public memory preserves the legitimacy of resolution. (1 revision)
- Witnesses confirm occurrence and process. (1 revision)
- Consistent understanding supports unity (1 revision)
- Competence requires understanding of the law being applied (1 revision)
- Maintain balance among all beings (1 revision)
- Proper method ensures future understanding. (1 revision)
- Original language retains priority in interpretation (1 revision)
- Outsiders lack jurisdiction absent lawful basis. (1 revision)
- The origin of names, houses, and crests (1 revision)
- Land and resources must be preserved for future use. (1 revision)
- Protection of law is a lawful act (1 revision)
- Land is not transferable outside law. (1 revision)
- How land was acquired or entrusted (1 revision)
- Protection of future generations sustains the Nation. (1 revision)
- UNDRIP does not replace Indigenous legal orders (1 revision)
- Unlawful use affects standing and trust. (1 revision)