Inter-community matters are addressed

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Inter-Community Matters Are Addressed

Tsm’syen law recognizes multiple communities, houses, and clans within a shared Nation.

Matters that cross community boundaries must be lawfully addressed — not ignored, and not centralized by default.

Meaning

Inter-community matters include issues that:

  • Affect more than one community or territory
  • Involve multiple houses or clans
  • Impact shared lands, waters, or travel routes
  • Require coordination beyond a single local authority

These matters do not dissolve local jurisdiction. They require lawful coordination between jurisdictions.

Legal Principle

No community stands alone, and no community rules the others.

Inter-community matters are addressed through:

  • Mutual recognition of authority
  • Lawful articulation of shared Ayaawk
  • Witnessed processes between communities
  • Respect for territorial and house boundaries

Coordination is required. Replacement is forbidden.

Process

Inter-community matters are addressed by:

  • Notifying affected houses and communities
  • Convening lawful representatives
  • Hearing each jurisdiction in its own right
  • Seeking resolution through consensus where possible
  • Recording outcomes through witnesses and public memory

Silence or unilateral action has no legitimacy.

Limits on Central Authority

No central body may:

  • Assume jurisdiction over inter-community matters by default
  • Decide outcomes without affected communities present
  • Impose solutions for administrative convenience
  • Convert coordination into permanent control

Any authority exercised must be specific, limited, and revocable.

Protection Against Harm

Failure to address inter-community matters lawfully results in:

  • Escalation of conflict
  • Breakdown of trust
  • Encroachment on territory or authority
  • External interference filling the vacuum

Addressing matters openly protects all communities.

Continuity

Inter-community law preserves long-term relationships.

Through proper process:

  • Boundaries remain clear
  • Responsibilities remain shared
  • Disputes do not harden into division
  • The Nation remains plural and coherent

Unity is maintained through law, not dominance.

Cross References