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
Find the sentence in paragraph 2 that links litigation/claims by native Canadians to invoking the collective-ownership concept; use that one-way statement to evaluate each option.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.The passage most supports which one of the following statements about the tribal legal systems mentioned in the second paragraph of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Paragraph 2 states that tribes 'have traditionally employed a concept of collective ownership' and that 'in all cases in which native Canadians have made legal claim to movable property they have done so by invoking this latter concept.' These lines explicitly say that whenever native Canadians have brought legal claims (i.e., engaged in litigation) they invoked collective-ownership concepts, which supports choice C's claim that all tribes that have engaged in such litigation have legal systems that employ the concept of collective property.
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