Christina R. Morgan

Associate

Boston, MA
D 215.789.4951
[email protected]

Education

The University of Michigan, 2016

  • Degree: Bachelor of Science in Biopsychology, Cognition, and Neuroscience; Minor in Writing
  • Honors: Literature, Science, and the Arts Honors Program; Degree with Distinction; University Honors

The George Washington University Law School, 2022

  • Degree: Juris Doctor, Concentration in Environmental Law
  • Honors: Pro Bono Recognition; Dean’s Recognition for Professional Development; Simon Tucker Law Scholarship
Overview

Christina Morgan is an Associate in Freeman Mathis & Gary, LLP’s Boston office. She is a member of the firm’s Construction and Design Law, Tort & Catastrophic Loss, Employment, and Professional Liability/Errors and Omissions sections. Ms. Morgan works on Freeman Mathis & Gary’s Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Litigation Team and is involved in the Multi-District Litigation (MDL) concerning aqueous film-forming foam that is pending in Charleston, South Carolina. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan and the George Washington University Law School. While at GW Law, Ms. Morgan served as a Law Clerk for the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Site Remediation Enforcement, where she primarily worked on the PFAS Team, a Student Practitioner for the Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office, and a Law Clerk for the United States Department of Justice’s Environmental Crimes Section. Ms. Morgan also was a member of The George Washington University International Law Review, and her Note, Using Uganda’s Regulations as a Model for Regulating Access to and Benefit-Sharing of Biological Resources and Traditional Knowledge in the United Republic of Tanzania, which was published in Volume 54 of the journal, was awarded the Jamie Grodsky Prize for Environmental Law Scholarship.

Bar Admissions

Massachusetts

Publications & Engagements

Christina Morgan, Note, Using Uganda as a Model for Regulating Access to and Benefit-Sharing of Biological Resources and Traditional Knowledge in the United Republic of Tanzania, 54 GEO. WASH. INT’L L. REV. 179, 285-310 (2023).

Awards and Recognition
  • Jamie Grodsky Prize for Environmental Law Scholarship