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Sector

Self-Governance

Lawyers, public servants, civic leaders

Local Governance Needs Local Lawyers

Why It Matters

Communities govern themselves through law. Local governance — city councils, county commissioners, zoning boards, school boards — depends on citizens who understand legal process, can work through regulatory requirements, and can represent their neighbors. When lawyers are trained in distant law schools and recruited into urban firms, small communities are left legally underserved and civically thin.

The same is true at a deeper level: civic culture is built by people who have chosen it. Mayors who grew up in the town and intend to raise their children there. County attorneys who know the land and the landowners. School board members who have decades of investment in the community's future. These people are not recruited — they emerge. And they emerge because they were formed.

The civic life of a community is staffed by specific people doing specific jobs. The campaign manager who knows every precinct because he grew up here. The county administrator who has spent twenty years learning where the bodies are buried and how the water rights actually work. The sheriff's deputy who is honored by the people he serves because he is one of them. The attorney who has argued before the same judge for a decade and knows the local courts in ways no out-of-town firm ever will. These are not abstract civic virtues — they are concrete vocations that require formation. CHI forms them.

Programs in This Sector

Accredited Programs from Partner Universities

Programs available through the CHI catalog. Offered through Hall dual-enrollment at accredited partner universities.

Bachelor's

Bachelor of Arts — Political Science

via West Texas A&M University

Political theory, public policy, constitutional law, and civic leadership. For students pursuing public service, law school, or local governance careers.

Associate's

Associate of Arts — Government and Public Affairs

via Houston Christian University

Two-year civic foundation for students entering public service, advocacy, or continuing to a bachelor's program in law or government.

More Featured Programs (5)
Bachelor's
BA Criminal Justice
via Houston Christian University
Undergraduate
BSW Social Work
via Indiana Wesleyan University
Bachelor's
BS Criminal Justice
via Southeastern University
Bachelor's
BS Criminal Justice
via William Jessup University
Master's
MA Global Development & Justice
via William Jessup University
University Partners
West Texas A&M University
Houston Christian University
In the CHI Network
Hall Blueprints that serve this sector
Tutor Networks aligned with this sector
Start a Hall

Start a Civic Hall in your community

You don't need a building. You need a vision for your community, a group of students, and the willingness to lead. CHI provides the accredited programs, training, and ongoing support.

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