Higher-level matters may require broader recognition.

From We Are Ts'msyen
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Higher-Level Matters May Require Broader Recognition

Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Purpose

This entry affirms that matters affecting a wider scope of people, relationships, or territory may require broader recognition to achieve lawful resolution. Recognition expands in proportion to the scope of the matter.

Core Principle

Higher-level matters may require broader recognition.

Meaning of Higher-Level Matters

A matter is higher-level when its effects:

  • Extend beyond a single house
  • Involve multiple houses or clans
  • Affect shared territory, resources, or collective relationships
  • Carry consequences for continuity across the Nation

Scope, not status, determines level.

Meaning of Broader Recognition

Broader recognition refers to acknowledgment and awareness by those lawfully connected to the matter.

Recognition may include:

  • Participation or acknowledgment by additional houses or clans
  • Expanded witnessing
  • Collective awareness sufficient to preserve public memory
  • Confirmation that resolution aligns with ayaawx at the appropriate scope

Recognition does not imply centralized control.

Relationship to Jurisdiction

As scope increases, recognition may widen.

  • House-level matters require house recognition
  • Inter-house matters may require clan recognition
  • Matters affecting the Nation may require collective recognition

Jurisdiction remains specific even as recognition broadens.

Limits

Broader recognition does not:

  • Eliminate house or clan responsibility
  • Transfer authority automatically to a higher body
  • Justify intervention without lawful basis
  • Create universal jurisdiction

Recognition supports legitimacy; it does not replace competence.

Relationship to Witnessing

Broader recognition often requires broader witnessing.

Witnessing at the appropriate scope:

  • Preserves public memory
  • Confirms legitimacy of resolution
  • Prevents denial or reinterpretation

Witnessing expands only as necessary.

Continuity

By requiring broader recognition for higher-level matters, Tsm’syen law preserves balance, prevents misplacement of authority, and maintains continuity across generations.

See also: Competent Jurisdiction