Professor Neil H. Buchanan, James J. Freeland Eminent Scholar Chair in Taxation and UF Law’s Director of Global Scholarly Initiatives, hosted a Critical Tax Conference welcoming scholars from across the country. The recorded panels can be viewed below. (Note that the recordings include only each speaker’s presentation. Question & Answer periods are not included due to limitations on legal permissions for non-speakers.)
➤ Neil H. Buchanan, University of Florida, “Efficiency is an Incoherent Concept”
➤ Jonathan Choi, University of Minnesota, “An Empirical Study of Statutory Interpretation in Tax Law”
➤ Charlotte Crane, Northwestern University, “Is There a Federal Common Law of Tax? The Supreme Court’s Decision in Rodriguez v. FDIC”
➤ David Elkins, Netanya College School of Law, ‘The Right and the Good: The Rhetoric of International Taxation”
➤ Leandra Lederman, Indiana University-Bloomington, “The Fraud Triangle and Tax Evasion”
➤ Henry Ordower, Saint Louis University, “Capital, an Elusive Tax Object and Impediment to Sustainable Taxation”
➤ Orli Oren-Kolbinger, Villanova University, “The Error Cost of Marriage”
➤ Dan Shaviro, New York University, “What Are Minimum Taxes, and Why Might One Favor or Disfavor Them?”
➤ Nancy Shurtz, University of Oregon, “Tax-Base Bias and Gender Inequality”
➤ Carla Spivack, Oklahoma City University, “Families, Taxes and Tolstoy”
➤ Phyllis Taite, Florida A&M University, “Making Tax Policy Great Again: America, You’ve Been Trumped”