542 U.S. 55 (2004)
Norton v. Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance is a landmark case in which the Supreme Court addressed the crucial issue of federal land management under the Federal Lands Policy and Management Act (FLPMA).
Does the Bureau of Land Management's alleged failure to protect public lands from off-road vehicle use under the FLPMA represent a failure of a mandatory duty that is subject to judicial review?
The rule established in this case is that under the Administrative Procedure Act, a court can only compel agency action when there is a clear, non-discretionary duty. The FLPMA's requirements must entail specific statutory obligations rather than general policy directives for judicial intervention to be warranted.
The Supreme Court held that the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance failed to show that the BLM violated a mandatory, discrete duty under the FLPMA and that general policy adherence could not be compelled through judicial means.
The significance of Norton v. Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance for law students lies in its clarification of judicial review doctrines under the APA. The case demonstrates the legal framework within which environmental groups and other stakeholders must operate when seeking to enforce statutory land management obligations. Furthermore, it delineates the boundaries of judicial intervention in administrative discretion, which is central to understanding modern administrative law.