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Showing below up to 50 results in range #351 to #400.

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  1. Adaawk Guide Conduct Within and Beyond the House (1 revision)
  2. Smoke Feasts (1 revision)
  3. Adaawx guide interpretation across generations (1 revision)
  4. House Adaawk Are Primarily Oral (1 revision)
  5. International norms do not reinterpret Indigenous law (1 revision)
  6. Elders are recognized through age, experience, and conduct (1 revision)
  7. Adaawk May Be Recorded Orally or in Writing (1 revision)
  8. International law may recognize Indigenous rights and legal orders (1 revision)
  9. Recording refers to documenting law, memory, or process. (1 revision)
  10. Elders Recall and Contextualize Adaawk (1 revision)
  11. Movement between communities does not dissolve house obligations. (1 revision)
  12. Waap (1 revision)
  13. Authority is exercised in trust, not ownership. (1 revision)
  14. Tribal Scope Does Not Erase House Adaawk (1 revision)
  15. Clear naming protects law. (1 revision)
  16. Sim’oogit Authority Within the Wilp (1 revision)
  17. Harm Creates Imbalance (1 revision)
  18. Adaawk Establish Standing of a House and Its Leaders (1 revision)
  19. Unwitnessed use lacks legitimacy. (1 revision)
  20. Interpretation is offered, not imposed (1 revision)
  21. Youth participate in governance through observation and involvement (1 revision)
  22. No party may impose resolution unilaterally. (1 revision)
  23. Oral law as binding law (1 revision)
  24. Protection of future generations sustains the Nation. (1 revision)
  25. Integrity is preserved through clear limits (1 revision)
  26. Modern violations include actions affecting land, water, resources, people, or law (1 revision)
  27. Regular review and renewal through Elders and houses (1 revision)
  28. Continuity depends on careful preservation. (1 revision)
  29. External forums do not determine internal meaning (1 revision)
  30. National response does not erase house or clan responsibility (1 revision)
  31. Respectful coexistence with band and municipal systems (1 revision)
  32. Consistency across houses and clans (1 revision)
  33. Dialogue does not permit alteration of law (1 revision)
  34. Correct response strengthens law. (1 revision)
  35. Respect, Trust, Honor, Humility (1 revision)
  36. Competence requires understanding of the law being applied (1 revision)
  37. Response seeks restoration of balance. (1 revision)
  38. Ensure continuity of life across generations (1 revision)
  39. Youth must be protected from premature burden (1 revision)
  40. The Codex supports transmission to future generations. (1 revision)
  41. It does not create law unilaterally (1 revision)
  42. Preventing “reasonable limits” arguments from eroding Tsm’syen law (1 revision)
  43. Law is judged across generations, not moments. (1 revision)
  44. Implementation refers to the lawful practice of Tsm’syen law. (1 revision)
  45. Lawful refusal to accept harm protects the Nation. (1 revision)
  46. Overview of Tsm’syen tribes (1 revision)
  47. Names that carry legal continuity (1 revision)
  48. It does not replace elders, houses, or clans. (1 revision)
  49. Climate Change Impacts (1 revision)
  50. Collective defense of law and land is organized (1 revision)

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