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Books > Law > Laws of other jurisdictions & general law > Financial, taxation, commercial, industrial law > Financial law > Taxation law
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1950.
This book brings together a landmark collection of essays on tax
law and policy to celebrate the legacy of Professor Judith
Freedman. It focuses on the four areas of taxation scholarship to
which she made her most notable contributions: taxation of SMEs and
individuals, tax avoidance, tax administration, and taxpayers'
rights and procedures. Professor Freedman has been a major driving
force behind the development of tax law and policy scholarship, not
only in the UK, but worldwide. The strength and diversity of the
contributors to this book highlight the breadth of Professor
Freedman's impact within tax scholarship. The list encompasses some
of the most renowned taxation experts worldwide; they include
lawyers, economists, academics and practitioners, from Britain,
Canada, Portugal, Australia, Germany, Italy, Malta, Ireland, and
Ukraine.
This book examines the relationship between tax law and crisis. In
times of environmental, financial, and public health breakdown,
policymakers look to tax for solutions. Yet these crises also
constrain the ways in which tax liabilities can be imposed and
administered, and limit the revenues that can be collected. What
should governments do in these circumstances and what are the wider
consequences for states, societies, and institutions such as the
EU? The book shows how crises place strain on the basic functions
of tax, including revenue-raising, institution-building,
regulation, redistribution, and the structuring of society. These
strains bear more heavily on some sections of business and society
than others. This makes the tax consequences of crisis
unpredictable. It also means that the best choice of legal response
is not merely a technical matter. Instead, it engages deeper
attitudes towards crisis relief, change, social values, and
democratic control. These issues are highlighted by COVID-19 but
are of utmost lasting importance. The book takes a comprehensive
approach and looks in more depth at the systemic roles that crises
play in contemporary tax systems. It features an impressive cast of
leading researchers across multiple jurisdictions and is essential
for policymakers and scholars alike.
These are papers from the 10th Cambridge Tax Law History
Conference, which took place in July 2020. The papers fall within
the following basic themes: - UK tax administration issues - UK tax
reforms in the 20th century - History of tax in the UK - The UK's
first double tax treaty - The 1982 Australia-US tax treaty - The
legacy of colonial influence - Reform of Dutch excises, and -
Canadian tax avoidance.
This book seeks durable solutions for tax crime and is a great
resource for the development of knowledge, policy and law on tax
crime. The book uniquely blends current practice with new
approaches to countering tax crime. With insights from the
EU-funded project, PROTAX, which conducts advanced research on tax
crimes, the book comparatively analyses the EU's tax crime measures
and the Ten Global Principles (TGPs) on fighting tax crime by the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The
study critically examines how the TGPs can serve as minimum
standards for the EU to counter tax crime such as tax evasion and
tax fraud. The study also analyses how the anti-tax avoidance
package can be graduated to fight tax crime in the EU. When
escalated, the strengths of the EU tax crime measures and TGPs can
form a fortress in which criminal law can be empowered to mitigate
tax crimes with greater effect. The book will be particularly
useful for end-user stakeholders such as tax policy makers, LEAs,
professional enablers as well as academics and students interested
in productive interaction between tax, criminal and administrative
laws.
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