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Showing below up to 50 results in range #151 to #200.

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  1. Consistent understanding supports unity
  2. Context Determines Meaning and Scope
  3. Context Must Accompany Any Recorded Crest History
  4. Context Must Accompany Record
  5. Context and Identity Must Accompany Any Record
  6. Context and Lineage Must Accompany Record
  7. Context determines lawful use.
  8. Context includes speaker, place, time, and purpose.
  9. Context must accompany all records.
  10. Context must accompany recorded material
  11. Continuity Depends on Accurate Transmission
  12. Continuity Depends on Correct Telling
  13. Continuity depends on careful preservation.
  14. Continuity depends on correct transmission, not assumption
  15. Continuity depends on correct understanding of law
  16. Continuity depends on correct use of the Codex
  17. Continuity depends on uninterrupted transmission
  18. Continuity during disruption
  19. Continuity of law does not depend on recognition
  20. Continuity through Adaawk
  21. Coordinate inter-house relationships
  22. Coordination does not create hierarchy between communities.
  23. Coordination supports, but does not replace, local governance
  24. Coordination supports shared understanding of law.
  25. Correct implementation strengthens Nation law
  26. Correct interpretation strengthens governance
  27. Correct response strengthens law.
  28. Correct restraint strengthens long-term governance.
  29. Correct use strengthens collective governance.
  30. Corrections strengthen accuracy.
  31. Crest Histories
  32. Crest Histories Are Preserved Through Adaawk and Teaching
  33. Crest Histories Are Taught Through Story and Practice
  34. Crest Histories Clarify Relationships Between Houses
  35. Crest Histories Guide Inter House and Inter Tribal Conduct
  36. Crest Histories Operate as Legal Memory
  37. Crest Histories Record Significant Events Actions or Agreements
  38. Crest Ownership Is Tied to House and Lineage
  39. Crest obligations across all Tsm’syen territories
  40. Crests Are Held by Houses Not Individuals
  41. Crests Carry History and Law
  42. Crests Confer Lawful Authority Within Defined Scope
  43. Crests Endure Through Lawful Use
  44. Crests Identify House Lineage and Authority
  45. Crests May Be Displayed in Ceremony Governance and Teaching
  46. Crests May Not Be Invented or Altered
  47. Crests Record Events Relationships and Authority
  48. Crests Represent Recorded Histories and Rights
  49. Crests and Symbolic Authority
  50. Cultural decoration

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