Laxyuup — Lands of the Tsm’syen

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Laxyuup — Lands of the Tsm’syen

Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Purpose

This page describes laxyuup, the lands of the Tsm’syen, and their place within Tsm’syen law. It records how land is understood as a source of law, responsibility, and relationship rather than property.

This page does not define land ownership under external legal systems.

General principles

  • Laxyuup is the source of law, identity, and responsibility.
  • Land is held through relationship, not possession.
  • Authority over land is governed by ayaawx.
  • Responsibility to land is collective and ongoing.
  • Disconnection from land weakens law.

LAXYUUP

Lands

  • Laxyuup refers to the lands of the Tsm’syen.
  • Land includes territory, waters, resources, and places of meaning.
  • Laxyuup is inseparable from people, law, and history.
  • Land is not transferable outside law.

RELATIONSHIP

People and land

  • Houses hold responsibility for specific areas of laxyuup.
  • Responsibility includes care, use, protection, and respect.
  • Use of land carries obligations to others and to future generations.
  • Relationship to land is maintained through conduct.

ADAAWX

Legal memory of land

  • Adaawx record boundaries, histories, and events tied to laxyuup.
  • Stories establish rights, responsibilities, and consequences.
  • Elders recall and interpret adaawx when land is in question.
  • Adaawx guide lawful use and decision-making.

AUTHORITY

Governance of land

  • Authority over laxyuup arises from ayaawx.
  • Houses exercise authority within their lawful areas.
  • Clan and Nation law govern shared or overlapping lands.
  • No authority exists without responsibility.

USE

Lawful interaction

  • Land use must align with ayaawx.
  • Extraction or alteration requires lawful recognition.
  • Harm to land creates imbalance requiring restoration.
  • Unlawful use affects standing and trust.

DISPUTE

Conflict and resolution

  • Land disputes are addressed through Tsm’syen law.
  • Resolution prioritizes restoration of balance.
  • Witnessing is required for legitimacy.
  • Persistent misuse of land undermines authority.

CONTINUITY

Future responsibility

  • Laxyuup must be protected for future generations.
  • Decisions consider long-term impact.
  • Teaching responsibility to land is essential to continuity.
  • Law survives through continued relationship to land.

LIMITS

Boundaries

  • Laxyuup is not subject to unilateral alienation.
  • External claims do not displace internal law.
  • Loss of responsibility weakens authority over land.
  • Lawful limits preserve balance.

To be developed

  • Documented adaawx tied to specific territories
  • Inter-house land responsibilities
  • Relationship to water and marine areas
  • Interaction with external land claims
  • Source citations

Navigation >> Structure of the Nation >> Wilp and Waap Governance >> Inter-House and Inter-Tribal Dispute Law >> Competent Jurisdiction >> Ayaawx >> Adaawx