And according to
aboriginal legal scholar Hannah askew, for non-Indigenous learners, understanding Indigenous
legal traditions will require not only finding a way to access the content of these
traditions, but also learning how to interpret a completely different style of
legal system − one that substitutes «a set of interlocking and overlapping processes» for rigid rules, and that requires that those processes be understood via the full range of senses: sound, touch, sight, taste and smell.