Implementation Across All Communities
Implementation Across All Communities
Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working
Purpose
This page describes how Tsm’syen law is implemented across multiple communities while respecting local authority, house governance, and lawful variation. It records principles that guide consistency without centralization.
This page does not impose uniform administration or override community governance.
General principles
- Law applies across the Nation through relationship, not force.
- Communities retain authority over local matters.
- Implementation must respect ayaawx and adaawx.
- Consistency does not require uniformity.
- Coordination supports, but does not replace, local governance.
IMPLEMENTATION
Meaning
- Implementation refers to the lawful practice of Tsm’syen law.
- Practice occurs at the community, house, and clan levels.
- Law is implemented through conduct, decision-making, and response.
- Written guidance does not substitute lived application.
COMMUNITIES
Local authority
- Each community governs its internal affairs.
- Community governance operates within broader Nation law.
- Local conditions may shape lawful application.
- Community authority is not erased by Nation-level coordination.
COORDINATION
Across communities
- Coordination supports shared understanding of law.
- Communication prevents fragmentation or contradiction.
- Coordination does not create hierarchy between communities.
- Mutual recognition preserves unity.
ROLE OF HOUSES
Continuity and standing
- Houses link law across communities.
- House responsibilities remain consistent regardless of location.
- Movement between communities does not dissolve house obligations.
- Houses support lawful continuity.
ROLE OF ELDERS
Guidance and clarity
- Elders may assist in clarifying law across communities.
- Guidance respects local context and history.
- Elders do not impose uniform outcomes.
- Trust limits the scope of guidance.
VARIATION
Lawful differences
- Lawful variation between communities is expected.
- Differences arise from history, place, and relationship.
- Variation does not imply conflict or error.
- Balance is maintained through dialogue and witnessing.
LIMITS
Boundaries
- Implementation does not permit centralized control.
- Communities may refuse unlawful direction.
- External pressure does not define implementation.
- Lawful refusal protects autonomy.
CONTINUITY
Protection of unity
- Consistent understanding supports unity.
- Correct implementation strengthens Nation law.
- Failure to coordinate weakens trust.
- Teaching shared principles supports future governance.
To be developed
- Community-to-community coordination practices
- Mechanisms for addressing inconsistency
- Relationship to Nation-level guidance
- Source citations
Navigation >> Structure of the Nation >> Tsm’syen National Assembly >> Wilp and Waap Governance >> Elders as Interpreters of Law >> National Ayaawk Codex >> Competent Jurisdiction >> Ayaawx >> Adaawx