<P> In the United States, a citizen suit is a lawsuit by a private citizen to enforce a statute . Citizen suits are particularly common in the field of environmental law . </P> <P> Citizen suits come in three forms . First, a private citizen can bring a lawsuit against a citizen, corporation, or government body for engaging in conduct prohibited by the statute . For example, a citizen can sue a corporation under the Clean Water Act (CWA) for illegally polluting a waterway . Second, a private citizen can bring a lawsuit against a government body for failing to perform a non-discretionary duty . For example, a private citizen could sue the Environmental Protection Agency for failing to promulgate regulations that the CWA required it to promulgate . In a third, less common form, citizens may sue for an injunction to abate a potential imminent and substantial endangerment involving generation, disposal or handling of waste, regardless of whether or not the defendant's conduct violates a statutory prohibition . This third type of citizen suit is analogous to the common law tort of public nuisance . In general, the law entitles plaintiffs who bring successful citizen suits to recover reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs . </P> <P> In 1970, when amending the Clean Air Act, the United States Congress was inspired by similar legislation in the civil rights arena to begin including specific provisions for citizens to bring suit against violators or government agencies to enforce environmental laws . Today, most anti-pollution laws have provisions for citizen suits and they have become a major means of ensuring compliance with environmental laws . Public - interest environmental legal service organizations, such as Earthjustice and the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic, often prosecute citizen suits . Some non-environmental statutes, such as the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Fair Housing Amendments Act, also contain citizen suit provisions, but the majority of regulatory statutes do not . </P>

Can a private citizen sue the federal government