Agyenim Boateng


Agyenim N. Boateng is a Ghanaian American lawyer and judge. He is a dual citizen of the United States and Ghana currently residing in Lexington, Kentucky in the United States. He is a former Administrative Law Judge for the Transportation Cabinet of Kentucky and a former Deputy Attorney General for the State of Kentucky. He is also active in the United States wing of the New Patriotic Party of Ghana.

Education and training

He was educated at St Peter's Boys School, Kumasi, Ghana, followed by secondary education at Asanteman Secondary School. He was the first Student Editor of The Porcupine. He passed the Cambridge School Certificate Exam in 1959. In 1962, he passed the University of London General Certificate of Education Advanced Level examinations. He became a tutor at his alma mater for about three years before coming to the United States for further studies in 1964
Boateng attended Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, where he obtained a B.A. in Government in 1966. He went on to achieve a master's degree M.A. in political science from Atlanta University in 1969. His master's thesis was entitled: "Some Problems of National Integration in Ghana and Nigeria, 1957–66: A Case Study."
Agyenim attended Howard University School of Law, Washington D.C, where he obtained a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree in 1973. His doctoral thesis was entitled: "Case Study of Forced Labor among Professionals in Europe and Africa: A Question of International Law on Human Rights". While at Howard, he became the president of the Howard University Society of International law and led the moot court team as its captain for the annual international Jessup Moot Court Competition, organized by the American Society of International Law,.His team won the American regional championship.

Career

He worked as an assistant professor in Alabama State University in Montgomery, Alabama and also at Daniel Payne College in Birmingham, Alabama, where he served as assistant professor of political and social science. From 1973 to 1974 he served as a fellow Reginald Heber Smith Community Lawyer with Louisville Legal Aid Society.
Boateng then joined the Commonwealth of Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, served as a state attorney and rose through the ranks to become division director of the Administrative Law Hearing Section, where he also served as its chief administrative law judge for 16 years. In 1998 he was appointed by the Attorney General for the Commonwealth as one of his assistants and later became his deputy and served that post until his retirement in January 2009. He is, since the fall of 2014, currently serving as an adjunct professor of American Government at Midway College, Midway, Kentucky.

Achievements

In 1973 he became a Reginald H. Smith Fellow, selected with 2000 other U.S. law school graduates to work as community Lawyers across the U.S. for various legal aid societies.
He was a member of the U.S. Ghanaian diasporans who went to Ghana in 2005 to lobby Ghana Parliament for the passage of ''Representative of the People's Amendment Act 699' which gave the right of Ghana diasporas to vote in Ghana's general elections and referenda from their places of residences, in 2005. In Dec 17 2008 he and five other plaintiffs from U.S successfully sued and won, at Accra High Court of Human Rights against the Electoral Commission of Ghana the right of Ghana diaspora to vote in 2020 general elections. He also drafted the necessary Regulations for its implementation by the National Electoral Commission of Ghana which failed to implement them.
Agyenim Boateng is now in private practice serving as legal and policy analyst consultant at his office in Lexington, Kentucky.

Awards

Dr. Agyenim Boateng is from Atimatim-Kumasi, Efigya-Kwabre District and belongs to the Ekuona clan of the Ashanti. He lived with wife Deloris and with their two children in Lexington, KY. He has two other grown sons.