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Showing below up to 50 results in range #351 to #400.
- Adaawk Guide Conduct Within and Beyond the House (1 revision)
- Smoke Feasts (1 revision)
- Adaawx guide interpretation across generations (1 revision)
- House Adaawk Are Primarily Oral (1 revision)
- International norms do not reinterpret Indigenous law (1 revision)
- Elders are recognized through age, experience, and conduct (1 revision)
- Adaawk May Be Recorded Orally or in Writing (1 revision)
- International law may recognize Indigenous rights and legal orders (1 revision)
- Recording refers to documenting law, memory, or process. (1 revision)
- Elders Recall and Contextualize Adaawk (1 revision)
- Movement between communities does not dissolve house obligations. (1 revision)
- Waap (1 revision)
- Authority is exercised in trust, not ownership. (1 revision)
- Tribal Scope Does Not Erase House Adaawk (1 revision)
- Clear naming protects law. (1 revision)
- Sim’oogit Authority Within the Wilp (1 revision)
- Harm Creates Imbalance (1 revision)
- Adaawk Establish Standing of a House and Its Leaders (1 revision)
- Unwitnessed use lacks legitimacy. (1 revision)
- Interpretation is offered, not imposed (1 revision)
- Youth participate in governance through observation and involvement (1 revision)
- No party may impose resolution unilaterally. (1 revision)
- Oral law as binding law (1 revision)
- Protection of future generations sustains the Nation. (1 revision)
- Integrity is preserved through clear limits (1 revision)
- Modern violations include actions affecting land, water, resources, people, or law (1 revision)
- Regular review and renewal through Elders and houses (1 revision)
- Continuity depends on careful preservation. (1 revision)
- External forums do not determine internal meaning (1 revision)
- National response does not erase house or clan responsibility (1 revision)
- Respectful coexistence with band and municipal systems (1 revision)
- Consistency across houses and clans (1 revision)
- Dialogue does not permit alteration of law (1 revision)
- Correct response strengthens law. (1 revision)
- Respect, Trust, Honor, Humility (1 revision)
- Competence requires understanding of the law being applied (1 revision)
- Response seeks restoration of balance. (1 revision)
- Ensure continuity of life across generations (1 revision)
- Youth must be protected from premature burden (1 revision)
- The Codex supports transmission to future generations. (1 revision)
- It does not create law unilaterally (1 revision)
- Preventing “reasonable limits” arguments from eroding Tsm’syen law (1 revision)
- Law is judged across generations, not moments. (1 revision)
- Implementation refers to the lawful practice of Tsm’syen law. (1 revision)
- Lawful refusal to accept harm protects the Nation. (1 revision)
- Overview of Tsm’syen tribes (1 revision)
- Names that carry legal continuity (1 revision)
- It does not replace elders, houses, or clans. (1 revision)
- Climate Change Impacts (1 revision)
- Collective defense of law and land is organized (1 revision)