Structure of the Nation: Difference between revisions

From We Are Ts'msyen
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Amusterer (talk | contribs)
Amusterer (talk | contribs)
Line 47: Line 47:


Communities:
Communities:
* Host multiple houses and clans
* [[Host multiple houses and clans]]
* Provide space for collective deliberation
* [[Provide space for collective deliberation]]
* Support daily governance, care, and mutual aid
* [[Support daily governance, care, and mutual aid]]
* Do not replace house authority
* [[Do not replace house authority]]


Community leadership must remain accountable to the houses present.
Community leadership must remain accountable to the houses present.

Revision as of 18:25, 15 January 2026

Part II — Social Order of the Tsm’syen

Structure of the Nation

Luu Wil Na Tsm’syen

The Structure of the Tsm’syen Nation

The Tsm’syen Nation is organized through a layered and relational legal order. Authority does not flow downward from a central ruler. It arises upward from land, houses, clans, and lived responsibility.

Each level of the Nation carries distinct duties, limits, and forms of accountability. No level may lawfully override another outside its proper role.


Wilp (Waap) — House Authority

The Wilp (Waap) is the foundational legal unit of the Nation.

A Wilp holds:

House authority is not ownership. It is stewardship held in trust and maintained through lawful conduct.

All higher structures depend upon the legitimacy of the houses beneath them.


Pteex — Clan Structure

Wilp are grouped within Pteex (clans).

Clans:

Clan affiliation establishes broader responsibility beyond a single house.


Galts’ap — Community Life

Communities (galts’ap) are places of shared living and cooperation.

Communities:

Community leadership must remain accountable to the houses present.


Tribal and National Order

The Nation emerges from the collective recognition of lawful houses and clans.

At the national level:

  • Shared Ayaawk is articulated
  • Inter-community matters are addressed
  • External relations are conducted
  • Collective defense of law and land is organized

National authority exists only where houses recognize it.


Balance of Authority

No structure is supreme by default.

Authority remains lawful only when:

  • Responsibilities are fulfilled
  • Limits are respected
  • Witnesses continue recognition
  • Ayaawk remains intact

When authority is misused, legitimacy may be withdrawn through lawful process.


Continuity Across Time

The structure of the Nation is not static.

It persists through:

  • Names that carry legal continuity
  • Adaawk that record precedent
  • Witnesses who confirm authority
  • Living practice across generations

The Nation endures because responsibility is remembered.


Cross-References