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Margaret P. Currin
Professor of Law
currin@law.campbell.edu
910-893-1772
Margaret Currin is a member of the charter class of Campbell College School of Law, where she served as a charter editor of the law review and was elected to membership in Phi Kappa Phi, and has done graduate legal studies at Georgetown University Law Center.
Currin has worked for state and local government, served as Legislative Director and Counsel to U.S. Senator John Tower, was appointed to the position of United States Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, and has engaged in the private practice of law.
Undergraduate Education:
AB (Religion), Meredith College
Higher Education:
JD (with distinction), Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law, Campbell University, 1979
Graduate Legal Studies, Georgetown University Law Center
Class Offerings:
Administrative Law
Government Litigation
Legislative Representation
Scientific Evidence
Externships
Law Practice Experience:
Legislative Director and Legal Counsel, US Senator John Tower
United States Attorney, Eastern District of North Carolina
Private practice
Professional Experience:
Member and Chairman, Wake County Board of Elections
Legal Counsel and Treasurer, North Carolina Republican Party
Memberships & Affiliations:
Member, North Carolina State Bar
Member, North Carolina Bar Association
Board of Directors, Treasurer, Secretary, Vice President, President, National Association of Former United States Attorneys
Member, Wake County Bar Association
Member, Tenth Judicial District Bar
Member, American Bar Association
Admitted to practice in North Carolina, EDNC, MDNC and US Supreme Court
Publications:
Margaret P. Currin, So You Want To Be A Lobbyist: A Look at NC Lawyer Lobbying and Influencing Public Opinion, Campbell Law Observer (1982).
Contributing author, Mandate for Leadership: Policy Management in a Conservative Administration, ("Office of Civil Rights / Bilingual Education Regulations" and "Adams v. Califano: The Case Pending Against the University of North Carolina"), The Heritage Foundation, 1981, pp. 181-187, 205-208.
Note ("Corporations—The Effect of Unanimous Approval of Corporate By-Laws"), 1 Campbell Law Review 153 (1979).
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