Paul DeWitt Carrington

CAREER

My Legal Education

Military Service

Academic Appointments

Service to Academic Institutions

Service to Public Institutions and Foundations

Service to the Legal Profession

Service to Private Clients

Political Activity

Community Activities

Honors

Publications

 

CONNECTIONS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Welcome to my website!

This website was created while I was a candidate for public office in the summer of 2004.  It has been revised and is now being maintained for use by students, academic friends and critics, descendants and relatives, and any strangers who happen upon the scene. 

For over sixty years, I have been engaging in public affairs and expressing my views on current issues.  In 2008, I serve as a precinct captain for the Democratic Party, and on committees of the North Carolina Bar, NC Advocates for Justice, and NC AARP.   I am engaged in encouraging the North Carolina legislature to enact a false claims law to reward whistleblowers who detect corruption in our state or local government.  I also continue to advocate campaign finance reform in our state. 

In national matters in 2008, I played a very minor role in persuading Congressmen to protect contract farmers from mandatory arbitration clauses disabling them from enforcing their rights against food processing firms.  I continue to encourage broader legislation to protect consumers and others from this form of oppression.  I am also engaged in efforts to enhance the methods by which our highest state court judges are selected and in the national debate about judicial independence and accountability.  And I remain concerned about issues of civil procedure in trial and appellate courts.

Also in 2008, I became involved  with a notable and diverse group seeking to establish more effective methods of deterring transnational corruption, an objective that has risen to the top of the agenda of OECD. 

I continue to work on a manuscript entitled Democracy at the Courthouse: The American Tradition of Private Enforcement of Public Law.  The work will suggest that if the world is to succeed in dealing effectively with abuses of the environment or the corruption of government in weak states, it may be necessary to accept the need for contingent fee lawyers empowered to discover information in private files, perhaps with a role for lay decision makers who are invulnerable to intimidation or capture.

I am also still actively engaged in efforts to bring the profession and the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States to a more constrained view of the Court's role and responsibilities.   I share this endeavor specially with Roger Cramton, but also with many others.  In 2006. Roger and I edited a book on the possibility of term limits.  We have two forthcoming essays to suggest other structural reforms intended modestly to lower the profile and self-image of the Justices.

These diverse interests are categorized and indexed in the column on the right so that anyone sharing an interest can see what I think about a matter without being burdened with any other information.   I welcome the thoughts of any reader, but especially on those topics. 

On the left column below the image are links to a curriculum vita supplemented by brief accounts and some links to previous utterances of an autobiographical sort.  Those curious about my 2004 campaign will find answers under Political Activity.  For kinfolk and anyone curious about the source of my questionable views, there is also a link to my family connections.  I pray that I have not neglected them.  For Thanksgiving 2008, we are celebrating our sesquicentennial:  Bessie and I and our four children have been married for 150 years!

 

INTERESTS: No doubt I would have done better to concentrate my efforts over fifty years on fewer subjects, but it would have been less fun

Academic Freedom and Civil Liberties

Appeals and Federal Politics

Civil Procedure and Politics

Civil Rights

Contracts and Arbitration

Criminal Law and the War on Drugs

International Relations and Comparative Law

Judicial Independence and Accountability: State Courts

Legal Education: Contemporary

Legal Education: History

Legal Profession: Contemporary

Legal Profession: History

Local Government and Public Education

Science and Law

Supreme Court of the United States

Torts, Juries, and Economics

Transnational Dispute Resolution

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This site was last updated 11/20/08