Elder authority is relational, not positional

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Elder Authority Is Relational, Not Positional

Statement

Elder authority is relational, not positional.

Meaning

In Tsm’syen law, elder authority does not arise from holding a title, office, or role.

It arises from relationships built over time through trust, conduct, knowledge, and accountability.

Authority exists between people, not inside positions.

Relational authority

Relational authority is formed through:

  • Ongoing relationships within the community
  • Witnessed conduct over time
  • Shared legal memory
  • Mutual recognition
  • Accountability to others

It depends on continued recognition. It cannot be separated from relationship.

Positional authority

Positional authority refers to authority claimed through:

  • Offices
  • Titles
  • Committees
  • Appointments
  • Organizational roles

Such positions may carry responsibilities, but they do not create elder authority.

When position replaces relationship, legitimacy weakens.

Why this distinction matters

Separating authority from position:

  • Prevents capture of elder authority by institutions
  • Protects elders from being used as political tools
  • Ensures authority remains accountable
  • Allows elders outside leadership roles to retain voice
  • Prevents silence through removal from office

Office may end. Relationship continues only while conduct remains lawful.

Recognition and withdrawal

Because elder authority is relational:

  • It grows through continued trust
  • It weakens when trust is broken
  • It may be withdrawn without conflict
  • It does not require formal removal

Witnesses determine recognition through memory and observation.

Relationship to law

Relational authority operates within:

  • Ayaawx
  • Adaawx
  • Lawful limits
  • Accountability before witnesses

No relationship creates exemption from law.

Cross-references