Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Alaska laws give special permissions to people doing 'traditional' uses of land and animals, but the laws never say exactly what 'traditional' means, which causes confusion. The government treated traditions as things commonly made before 1972 and seized sea-otter-pelt clothing because making those items hadn’t happened 'within living memory.' A court later ruled that this was too narrow, saying that if a practice stopped for a time because of outside forces, it can still be a tradition and shouldn’t be excluded just because it wasn’t recently practiced.
Logic Breakdown
Find how the 1986 district court and the FWS defined 'traditional' in the passage—look for the sentence linking 'tradition' to 'long-standing practice' and to 'continuity and regularity' and note that the 1986 court upheld the FWS rule requiring items be 'commonly produced' before 1972.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.The passage most strongly suggests that the court in the 1986 case believed that "traditional" should be defined in a way that
Correct Answer
B
B is correct. The passage explicitly links 'traditional' to long-standing practice and states that 'long-standing' refers not only to passage of time but to the 'continuity and regularity of a practice.' The passage also reports that the FWS defined authentic native articles as those 'commonly produced' before 1972 and that 'In 1986, FWS agents seized ... She sued, but the district court upheld the FWS regulations,' indicating the 1986 court accepted an interpretation that emphasizes continuity and regularity.
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