Teaching jurisdiction supports long-term self-governance.

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Teaching Jurisdiction Supports Long-Term Self-Governance

Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Purpose

This entry affirms that the deliberate teaching of jurisdiction is essential to sustaining lawful self-governance over time. Understanding where authority resides, how it is limited, and how it is exercised protects the continuity of Tsm’syen law across generations.

Core Principle

Teaching jurisdiction supports long-term self-governance.

Meaning

Teaching jurisdiction means transmitting knowledge of:

  • Where authority lawfully resides
  • How jurisdiction is established and limited
  • The relationship between competence, responsibility, and standing
  • When matters must remain local and when they may move to broader levels

Jurisdiction must be learned to be preserved.

Why Teaching Is Necessary

Without deliberate teaching:

  • Authority may drift or centralize
  • Jurisdiction may be assumed rather than established
  • Responsibility may be displaced
  • External systems may fill gaps created by uncertainty

Teaching prevents erosion before it occurs.

How Jurisdiction Is Taught

Jurisdiction is taught through:

  • Elders explaining law and precedent
  • Houses transmitting responsibility to members
  • Witnessing of lawful processes and outcomes
  • Correction when authority is misapplied
  • Public memory preserved through adaawk

Teaching occurs through practice, not abstraction.

Relationship to Youth

Youth are prepared for governance through observation, guidance, and gradual responsibility.

Teaching jurisdiction:

  • Builds understanding before authority is held
  • Prevents premature assumption of power
  • Ensures readiness rather than inheritance

Self-governance depends on preparation, not succession alone.

Relationship to Autonomy

Autonomy is sustained when jurisdiction is understood internally.

Teaching jurisdiction:

  • Reduces reliance on external systems
  • Strengthens confidence in Tsm’syen law
  • Supports lawful refusal where competence is lacking

Knowledge is a form of protection.

Continuity

By teaching jurisdiction deliberately, Tsm’syen law ensures that self-governance remains lawful, balanced, and resilient across generations. Law endures when each generation understands not only what authority exists, but where it belongs.

See also: