Key Dimensions and Scopes of American Samoa Government
American Samoa operates under a distinctive constitutional and jurisdictional framework that differs materially from all 50 U.S. states and from other U.S. territories. The government's structure, its service delivery scope, and its relationship to federal authority are shaped by a combination of the Revised Constitution of American Samoa (1967), the American Samoa Code Annotated (ASCA), and the territory's classification as an unincorporated, unorganized territory under U.S. sovereignty. Understanding the operational dimensions of this government is essential for researchers, legal professionals, contractors, and residents navigating public services, regulatory compliance, and jurisdictional questions.
- Dimensions that vary by context
- Service delivery boundaries
- How scope is determined
- Common scope disputes
- Scope of coverage
- What is included
- What falls outside the scope
- Geographic and jurisdictional dimensions
Dimensions that vary by context
The American Samoa Government (ASG) does not function as a uniform monolith. Its operational dimensions shift depending on which branch, agency, or statutory authority is engaged. Three primary axes of variation apply:
Constitutional vs. statutory authority. The Revised Constitution of American Samoa establishes the executive, legislative (Fono), and judicial branches. Statutory authority under the ASCA extends or constrains what each branch may do within specific subject-matter domains — taxation, land tenure, immigration, and public utilities, for example, each carry distinct enabling statutes.
Federal overlay. American Samoa is subject to selective application of federal law. Not all federal statutes apply automatically. Congress must affirmatively extend a statute to the territory, or the statute must contain express language covering unincorporated territories. The U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Insular Affairs, maintains administrative oversight of the territory's relationship to the federal government.
Fa'asamoa (customary law) dimension. The ASCA at Title 37 formally recognizes customary Samoan law (fa'asamoa) as applicable to matters involving communal land, matai (chief) titles, and family relations. This creates a parallel legal dimension that operates alongside, and sometimes in tension with, codified statutory law.
These 3 axes — constitutional, federal overlay, and customary law — produce a governance environment where the applicable legal dimension must be identified before any compliance, service, or legal question can be resolved.
Service delivery boundaries
ASG delivers services through a cabinet-level executive structure, territorial agencies, and autonomous or semi-autonomous bodies. Key delivery boundaries include:
- Executive departments (e.g., Department of Human and Social Services, Department of Health, Department of Education) — direct service delivery funded through the territorial budget and federal grants
- Autonomous agencies (e.g., American Samoa Power Authority, American Samoa Telecommunications Authority) — operate under separate enabling statutes with independent boards
- The American Samoa Medical Center (LBJ Tropical Medical Center) — the sole acute-care hospital in the territory, operated under ASG with federal support
Service delivery is constrained geographically by the territory's island composition. The main island of Tutuila (approximately 76 square miles) hosts the capital Pago Pago and the majority of government infrastructure. The Manu'a Islands — Ta'ū, Ofu, and Olosega — receive services through satellite offices and periodic government visits, creating a structurally tiered delivery model based on physical remoteness.
For a full directory of government services and entry points, the American Samoa Government Authority provides structured reference access to agency-level information.
How scope is determined
Scope within ASG is determined through 4 primary mechanisms:
- Constitutional grant — Powers enumerated in the Revised Constitution (1967), including the Governor's executive authority and the Fono's legislative mandate
- Statutory enactment — Laws passed by the Fono and codified in the ASCA, which define agency jurisdiction, regulatory reach, and service mandates
- Federal delegation or grant conditions — Federal funding (e.g., through the U.S. Department of Education, Medicaid waivers, or FEMA agreements) often attaches programmatic requirements that functionally expand or constrain what ASG agencies must do
- Judicial interpretation — The High Court of American Samoa and, on appeal, the Appellate Division, interpret scope disputes between agencies, between branches, and between statutory and customary law
The Office of the Governor holds broad executive authority under Article IV of the Revised Constitution, including the power to reorganize executive agencies by executive order subject to Fono review. This means agency scope can shift without full legislative action in certain circumstances.
Common scope disputes
Three categories of scope dispute recur in the ASG administrative and legal record:
Land tenure disputes. Article I of the Revised Constitution prohibits the alienation of communal land to non-Samoans. Disputes frequently arise at the boundary between communal land classifications and individually held lands, and between ASG's Department of Samoan Affairs jurisdiction and the High Court's judicial authority over matai title determinations.
Federal preemption questions. Because federal law applies selectively, questions regularly arise as to whether a given federal statute — environmental, labor, immigration — applies within American Samoa. The Ninth Circuit has jurisdiction over appeals from the High Court's Appellate Division, and circuit-level decisions shape how federal preemption is resolved in the territory.
Inter-agency jurisdictional overlaps. Regulatory authority over coastal development, for example, may simultaneously engage the Department of Commerce, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA, which does exercise jurisdiction in American Samoa under the Clean Water Act), and customary village governance structures. No single statutory provision cleanly resolves all such overlaps.
Scope of coverage
The following reference matrix identifies primary coverage domains and the governing authority for each:
| Domain | Governing Authority | Primary Instrument |
|---|---|---|
| Civil and criminal law | High Court of American Samoa | ASCA Title 46 (Criminal), Title 43 (Civil) |
| Land tenure | Dept. of Samoan Affairs / High Court | ASCA Title 37; Revised Constitution Art. I |
| Public health | Dept. of Health / LBJ Medical Center | ASCA Title 13; federal CMS waivers |
| Education (K–12) | Dept. of Education | ASCA Title 26; U.S. Dept. of Education grants |
| Immigration | ASG (non-U.S. nationals) | ASCA Title 41; distinct from U.S. federal immigration |
| Utilities | American Samoa Power Authority | ASCA Title 27 |
| Environmental regulation | ASG Dept. of Commerce / U.S. EPA | Clean Water Act (extended to territory); ASCA Title 24 |
| Matai titles | Dept. of Samoan Affairs / High Court | ASCA Title 37 |
American Samoa maintains its own immigration authority over non-U.S. nationals — a jurisdiction that does not exist in any U.S. state and distinguishes the territory from Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands, both of which fall under full U.S. immigration law.
What is included
ASG scope encompasses the following functional areas within the territory's borders:
- Legislative function: The bicameral Fono (18-member Senate drawn from matai, 21-member House of Representatives) enacts territorial law, appropriates the territorial budget, and ratifies or rejects executive appointments
- Executive administration: 16 executive departments plus autonomous bodies deliver public services across health, education, infrastructure, agriculture, taxation, and social services
- Judicial administration: The High Court system, including a District Court and the Appellate Division, adjudicates civil, criminal, and customary matters
- Territorial taxation: ASG administers its own income tax, excise taxes, and business license fees independently of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service
- Public land management: ASG controls communal and government land classifications covering a substantial proportion of the territory's land area
- Customs and port authority: The Port Administration manages Pago Pago Harbor, one of the deepest natural harbors in the South Pacific, with direct relevance to the tuna canning industry that has historically represented a significant share of territorial employment
What falls outside the scope
Certain functions are explicitly outside ASG's autonomous scope:
- U.S. federal constitutional rights (partial): As an unincorporated territory, not all provisions of the U.S. Constitution apply to American Samoa by force. The Insular Cases (a series of U.S. Supreme Court decisions beginning in 1901) established that only "fundamental" constitutional rights extend automatically to unincorporated territories. Enumerated rights beyond that set require congressional action.
- U.S. citizenship at birth: Persons born in American Samoa are U.S. nationals, not U.S. citizens, unless they take separate steps to naturalize. This status distinction — unique among U.S. territories — directly affects federal benefit eligibility, voting rights in federal elections, and passport documentation.
- Federal agency direct service delivery: The U.S. Social Security Administration, U.S. Postal Service, and other federal agencies operate in the territory, but these operations are not ASG functions and fall under federal, not territorial, administrative jurisdiction.
- Bankruptcy jurisdiction: U.S. federal bankruptcy courts do not have a division in American Samoa; territorial residents must petition through the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Hawaii.
Geographic and jurisdictional dimensions
American Samoa comprises 5 main islands and 2 coral atolls, with a total land area of approximately 76.1 square miles (197 square kilometers). The Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) extends 200 nautical miles from the territorial baseline, covering roughly 404,000 square kilometers of ocean — a maritime jurisdiction with direct relevance to fisheries regulation and international treaty obligations.
Island-level jurisdictional structure:
| Island/Atoll | Approximate Area | Administrative Status |
|---|---|---|
| Tutuila | 55.2 sq mi | Main administrative center |
| Aunu'u | 0.6 sq mi | Village governance |
| Ta'ū (Manu'a) | 17.2 sq mi | District government |
| Ofu | 1.8 sq mi | District government |
| Olosega | 1.4 sq mi | District government |
| Rose Atoll | 0.05 sq mi | National Wildlife Refuge (U.S. FWS) |
| Swains Island | 1.0 sq mi | Private ownership; ASG administrative jurisdiction disputed |
Rose Atoll falls under U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service management as part of the Pacific Remote Islands National Monument, not under ASG administrative authority. Swains Island presents a distinct jurisdictional complexity: its historical ownership by the Jennings family and its formal inclusion within American Samoa's territorial boundaries create an unresolved tension between private property claims and territorial governance.
The Key Dimensions and Scopes of American Samoa Government reference framework, alongside resources such as Frequently Asked Questions, provides access to jurisdiction-specific detail for researchers and professionals operating in or engaging with ASG regulatory domains.