

PROFESSOR OF LAW
Office: 215 College of Law
Building
Telephone: 307-766-5120
Joel L. Selig joined the faculty of the University of Wyoming College of Law
in 1983 after fifteen years as a litigator in federal district courts and courts
of appeals throughout the United States. He served two tours of duty in the
Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.:
as an attorney in the Division's Employment Section from 1969 to 1973, litigating
cases brought to enforce federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination;
and from 1977 to 1983 as an attorney, deputy section chief, and senior trial
attorney in the Division's Appellate Section, Housing and Credit Section, General
Litigation Section, and Federal Enforcement Section, litigating or supervising
litigation to enforce federal laws regarding school desegregation, housing
discrimination, employment discrimination, and voting discrimination. Between
these tours of duty at the Department of Justice, Selig served from 1973 to
1977 as Attorney-Director of the Government Employment Discrimination Project
of the national office of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law,
Washington, D.C., litigating employment discrimination cases against state
and local governments and against the federal government, including a case
which he argued in the U.S. Supreme Court. He also served in 1969 as an attorney
at the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, Boston, Mass.
Prof. Selig was the College of Law's first Centennial Distinguished Professor
of Law, a three-year endowed professorship which he held from 1992 to 1995.
He has received the Potter Law Club - Student Bar Association Outstanding Faculty
Award on six occasions, as well as the U S West Excellence in Education Award,
and the University of Wyoming's John P. Ellbogen Meritorious Classroom Teaching
Award. He has published in the Land and Water Law Review and the Wyoming Law
Review, and in the U. C. Davis Law Review, the University of Illinois Law Review,
the Indiana Law Journal, the Temple Law Review, and the Journal of Law & Politics.
His writings involve a variety of subjects including Fair Housing Act enforcement;
the Reagan Justice Department and civil rights; the selection of Supreme Court
justices; affirmative action in employment; changing the Justice Department's
position in pending litigation; the contrasting jurisprudential approaches
of Robert H. Bork and Archibald Cox; race in America; politics and law enforcement;
the Wyoming Rules of Civil Procedure; a book review of a biography of Archibald
Cox, with accompanying commentary and appreciation; and affirmative action
in college and law school student admissions.
Receiving his B.A. cum laude in 1965 from Harvard College, Selig went on to
complete his J.D. cum laude in 1968 from Harvard Law School, where he was a
member of the board of editors of the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties
Law Review. He was admitted to the Massachusetts Bar in 1968, the District
of Columbia Bar in 1976, and the bars of a number of federal district courts
and courts of appeals and of the U.S. Supreme Court.
He teaches the required courses in Civil Procedure I and II and in Evidence
and the elective course in Conflict of Laws. Prof. Selig is also an insufferable
opera fanatic.
B.A., Harvard (1965), cum laude
J.D., Harvard (1968), cum laude and Board of Editors of Harvard Civil
Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review
The Michigan Affirmative Action Cases: Justice O'Connor, Bakke Redux, and the Mice That Roared But Did Not Prevail, 76 TEMP. L. REV. 579 (2003)
Book Review, Commentary, and Appreciation, 1 WYO. L. REV. 263 (2001) (reviewing KEN GORMLEY, ARCHIBALD COX: CONSCIENCE OF A NATION (1997))
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UW College of Law
Dept. 3035
1000 E. University Ave.
Laramie, WY 82071
Phone: (307)766-6416
Fax: (307)766-6417
e-mail: lawmain@uwyo.edu