Debating Church-State Relations and Related Free-Speech Issues
Credits
About the Editor
The staff wish to acknowledge the special assistance of Margaret E. Fisher in preparing
this feature for publication.
Margaret E. Fisher
Margaret E. Fisher is an attorney-educator who has spent 24 years full-time in educating
the public about the law. She has taught a Street Law School at Seattle University School
of Law and its predecessor law school since 1982, and at Georgetown University School of
Law in Washington, D.C., from 1977 to 1981. In 1986-87, Fisher was a Fulbright Scholar to
Southern Africa to establish Street Law in schools. Fisher is author of numerous
nationally published books including the sixth edition of Street Law, curricula,
and articles on public legal education. She completed the national curriculum on youth
courts in 2001 for the American Bar Association, and she is taking the leadership in
launching new youth courts in Washington state. She also works part-time for the Office of
the Administrator for the Courts, where she serves as the state coordinator for the
national Youth for Justice program of the U.S. Department of Justice and works on domestic
violence training and resources for courts. She works with the Council on Public
Education, and she is a member of its executive board. Fisher graduated from Antioch
School of Law in 1976, and she is admitted to the bars of the state of Washington, the
District of Columbia, and several federal courts.
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