Library/PT 121/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Canadian law hasn’t clearly defined native Canadians’ rights, but many native people say they should control and own movable cultural items like tools and ceremonial clothes. Courts usually use private-property rules that favor whoever has legal papers—often museums—while many native communities treat these items as communal property, with each person as a caretaker who can’t sell them or pass them to heirs, so they rarely have the paperwork courts expect. Because courts are beginning to see that private-property rules don’t fit all cultures, they may start to recognize and honor communal ownership claims.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Find the author's main claim stated in the concluding paragraph about how courts will respond to litigation by native Canadians. Key supporting sentences: "Assignment of such rights to native communities has been difficult to achieve, but while traditional Canadian statute and common law has placed ownership of movable property with current custodians such as museums, recent litigation by native Canadians has called such ownership into question." and "But as their awareness of the inappropriateness of applying the private property concept to all cultural groups grows, Canadian courts will gradually recognize that native Canadians, while they cannot demonstrate ownership as prescribed by the notion of private property, can clearly claim ownership as prescribed by the notion of collective property, and that their claims to movable cultural property should be honored."

Passage Stimulus

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13.

Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main idea of the passage?

Correct Answer
B
The passage describes how litigation has challenged museum ownership under private-property rules and concludes that, as courts become aware that applying private-property concepts to all cultural groups is inappropriate, courts will 'gradually recognize' collective-ownership claims and honor them. The quoted concluding sentence explicitly predicts increased judicial recognition of collective claims, which matches option B's assertion that litigation is likely to succeed more frequently as courts acknowledge collective ownership as more appropriate.
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