Sep 19, 2024  
2024 - 2025 Graduate Catalog 
    
2024 - 2025 Graduate Catalog

LAW 507 - Role of State Attorney General


The roots of the Office of State Attorney General run deep in American jurisprudence. All thirteen American colonies had an attorney general and today all fifty states and the District of Columbia have opted for providing legal services through an office of state attorney general. Each office possesses extraordinarily broad jurisdiction and to varying degrees is independent from the executive branch of state government. Attorneys general in forty-three states are elected statewide on a partisan basis. The combination of sweeping jurisdiction and constitutional independence has given rise to a unique American legal institution of growing importance. The course will cover the day-to-day challenges faced by attorneys general and their staff in delivering high-quality legal advice that will guide state government constitutionally and ethically. The course will also cover the relationship of attorneys general with the federal government, the private bar, and a myriad of advocacy organizations. Although each state is unique, the course will demonstrate the remarkable congruence that exists among state attorneys general when addressing similar challenges and issues. The course is weighted toward those decisions by attorneys general that reflect their independent status which is most often revealed when legislatures, other elected officials, state agencies, or the federal government exceed their constitutional or statutory authority.