Using the Social Background Model to Explain Who Wins Federal Appellate Tax Decisions: Do Less Traditional Judges Favor the Taxpayer? Using the Social Background Model to Explain Who Wins Federal Appellate Tax Decisions: Do Less Traditional Judges Favor the Taxpayer?

Using the Social Background Model to Explain Who Wins Federal Appellate Tax Decisions: Do Less Traditional Judges Favor the Taxpayer‪?‬

Virginia Tax Review 2005, Summer, 25, 1

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

I. INTRODUCTION Legal research examining how judges decide cases has begun to complement political science literature about the effects of judges' social backgrounds on their decisions in various areas of the law. (1) However, very little systematic research has been conducted with respect to tax litigation, and almost none has analyzed whether or how a judge's social background influences the outcome of tax litigation. (2) This paper applies social science techniques to a data set of recent federal appellate tax cases compiled for this paper to study the connection between outcomes of tax litigation and the social backgrounds of the deciding judges.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2005
22 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
77
Pages
PUBLISHER
Virginia Tax Review
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
396.1
KB

More Books Like This

Expert Testimony: Regression Analysis and Other Systematic Methodologies (Guardian Pipeline, L.L.C. V. 950.80 Acres of Land) (Case Overview) Expert Testimony: Regression Analysis and Other Systematic Methodologies (Guardian Pipeline, L.L.C. V. 950.80 Acres of Land) (Case Overview)
2009
The Perils of Bright Lines: Section 6110(K) (3) and the Ambiguous Precedential Status of Written Determinations. The Perils of Bright Lines: Section 6110(K) (3) and the Ambiguous Precedential Status of Written Determinations.
2005
Tax Shelters and the Code: Navigating Between Text and Intent. Tax Shelters and the Code: Navigating Between Text and Intent.
2007
Perceptions of Equity Across Cultures and over Time: A Questionnaire-Experimental Approach. Perceptions of Equity Across Cultures and over Time: A Questionnaire-Experimental Approach.
2011
Empirical Social Choice Empirical Social Choice
2011
Textualism and Tax Shelters. Textualism and Tax Shelters.
2004

More Books by Virginia Tax Review

Revisiting Global Formulary Apportionment. Revisiting Global Formulary Apportionment.
2010
Capital Income Taxation and Progressivity in a Global Economy. Capital Income Taxation and Progressivity in a Global Economy.
2010
Tax Information Reporting and Compliance in the Cross-Border Context. Tax Information Reporting and Compliance in the Cross-Border Context.
2007
A Malthusian Analysis of the Socalled Dynasty Trust. A Malthusian Analysis of the Socalled Dynasty Trust.
2009
Reinvigorating Tax Expenditure Analysis and Its International Dimension. Reinvigorating Tax Expenditure Analysis and Its International Dimension.
2008
The Aftermath of the Cash Balance Controversy: Applying the Contribution-Based Test for Age Discrimination to Traditional Defined Benefit Pensions. The Aftermath of the Cash Balance Controversy: Applying the Contribution-Based Test for Age Discrimination to Traditional Defined Benefit Pensions.
2009