What responsibilities accompany that authority

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What Responsibilities Accompany That Authority

Principle

Authority over a territory carries **responsibilities**, not privileges.

A house that holds authority is obligated to act for the well-being of the land, the people, and future generations.

Core Responsibilities

A house holding territorial authority is responsible for:

  • **Protection of the land and its life**
 Safeguarding waters, animals, plants, and places from harm or misuse.
  • **Regulation of access and use**
 Determining how, when, and by whom the territory may be entered or used, according to law and protocol.
  • **Stewardship of subsistence resources**
 Ensuring food sources remain healthy, accessible, and sustainable  
 (see: Subsistence Law).
  • **Prevention of harm**
 Acting to prevent damage, conflict, or exploitation within the territory.
  • **Response to violations**
 Addressing harm through lawful processes, including restoration or compensation  
 (see: Restorative Justice).
  • **Hosting and protocol**
 Receiving others respectfully and lawfully when passage or use is permitted  
 (see: Protocol and Hosting Law).

Accountability

A house is accountable for how authority is exercised.

Failure to meet these responsibilities may result in:

  • challenge by other houses
  • loss of recognition
  • requirement for restitution
  • reassignment of responsibility

(see: Inter-House and Inter-Tribal Dispute Law).

Continuity of Responsibility

These responsibilities continue through **names**, not individuals.

When a name is taken:

  • obligations carry forward
  • authority does not reset
  • responsibility remains active

(see: Names as Legal Continuity).

Scope

This page records general responsibilities that accompany territorial authority.

House-specific duties, case examples, and detailed applications are recorded elsewhere and continue to develop over time.

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