Inter-House and Inter-Tribal Dispute Law

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Inter-House and Inter-Tribal Dispute Law

Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Purpose

This page describes how disputes between houses, and between distinct peoples or tribes, are addressed within Tsm’syen law. It records principles governing recognition of harm, responsibility, witnessing, and restoration across boundaries of house and community.

This page does not establish courts or external enforcement bodies.

General principles

INTER-HOUSE DISPUTES

Between houses

INTER-TRIBAL DISPUTES

Between peoples

ROLE OF HOUSES

Collective responsibility

ROLE OF ELDERS

Guidance and interpretation

WITNESS

Legitimacy and memory

  • Dispute resolution requires witnesses.
  • Witnesses confirm acknowledgment, process, and outcome.
  • Witnessing prevents private or coerced settlements.
  • Public memory preserves the legitimacy of resolution.

RESTORATION

Repair and balance

  • Resolution seeks to repair relationships and restore balance.
  • Restoration may include apology, compensation, or other appropriate acts.
  • Completion of restoration restores standing between parties.
  • Unresolved harm sustains imbalance.

LIMITS

Boundaries

  • Not all disputes can be resolved immediately.
  • Persistent refusal to engage undermines*


Cross-References