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Showing below up to 50 results in range #901 to #950.

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

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