Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Belize granted logging rights on 480,000 acres where many Maya people live, and the Maya sued, claiming those lands and resources as theirs. They base their case on common law (Belize’s legal system, which often relies on court decisions from countries like Australia and Canada when Belize has no local rulings) and on international-law norms from treaties Belize has joined. Courts in other common-law countries have used those sources to recognize indigenous land rights, so the passage argues that, although Belize could decide on its own, its shared legal roots and treaty obligations make it likely that Belize’s courts should recognize Maya rights too.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the author's primary claim about the Maya suit: the passage argues the suit is well-grounded in precedents from other common-law countries and in international-law norms.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
E
Correct. The passage's main point is that the Maya's suit is well-grounded in precedents of other common-law countries and international-law norms. For example, the passage states "The assertion by the Maya of land and resource rights is based on both common law and international law." It also says "The argument advanced by the Maya therefore relies substantially on precedents from other common-law jurisdictions, particularly Australia, Canada, and the United States—countries in which courts have recognized indigenous rights based on historical occupancy or use of lands," and that "This approach is consistent with the customary practice of the courts in Belize, which is to look to precedents of other common-law countries in the absence of relevant precedent in Belize's case law." Finally, the passage concludes that these factors "argues for a presumption in favor of recognizing indigenous rights in Belize." Together these passages support choice E, which asserts that the Maya suit "has merit" because it is "well-grounded in precedents of other nations whose legal systems derive from the tradition of English common law."
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