Traditional perceptions of tax exceptionalism from administrativ–law doctrines and requirements have been predicated at least in part on the importance of the tax code\u27s revenue–raising function. Yet, Congress increasingly relies on the Internal Revenue Service to administer government programs that have little to do with raising revenue and much more to do with distributing government benefits to the economically disadvantaged, subsidizing approved activities, and regulating outright certain economic sectors like nonprofits, pensions, and health care. As the attentions of the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service shift away from raising revenue and toward these other matters, the revenue—based justification for tax exceptiona...
The Internal Revenue Code is replete with policy preferences in the form of deductions, credits, and...
The notice and comment process is often touted as a mechanism for establishing political accountabil...
This paper examines the arguments found in what has become known as the anti-tax exceptionalism lite...
Traditional perceptions of tax exceptionalism from administrative law doctrines and requirements hav...
This Article argues that it is misleading to declare the death of tax exceptionalism and that struct...
Congress delegates extensive and growing lawmaking authority to federal administrative agencies in a...
It is often said that taxes are the lifeblood of government. As the nation’s tax collector, the IRS ...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
Many courts and academics critique existing tax exceptionalism or the ability of the federal income ...
To combat abusive tax shelters, the Department of the Treasury promulgated a general anti-abuse regu...
The Internal Revenue Service is not usually thought of as the agency charged with enforcing the nati...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
Despite the fact that the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) is overburdened and struggling to meet th...
The rules that should govern political campaign intervention by social welfare organizations exempt ...
In 1984, Congress enacted Internal Revenue Code section 132 to bring more certainty to the taxation ...
The Internal Revenue Code is replete with policy preferences in the form of deductions, credits, and...
The notice and comment process is often touted as a mechanism for establishing political accountabil...
This paper examines the arguments found in what has become known as the anti-tax exceptionalism lite...
Traditional perceptions of tax exceptionalism from administrative law doctrines and requirements hav...
This Article argues that it is misleading to declare the death of tax exceptionalism and that struct...
Congress delegates extensive and growing lawmaking authority to federal administrative agencies in a...
It is often said that taxes are the lifeblood of government. As the nation’s tax collector, the IRS ...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
Many courts and academics critique existing tax exceptionalism or the ability of the federal income ...
To combat abusive tax shelters, the Department of the Treasury promulgated a general anti-abuse regu...
The Internal Revenue Service is not usually thought of as the agency charged with enforcing the nati...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
Despite the fact that the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) is overburdened and struggling to meet th...
The rules that should govern political campaign intervention by social welfare organizations exempt ...
In 1984, Congress enacted Internal Revenue Code section 132 to bring more certainty to the taxation ...
The Internal Revenue Code is replete with policy preferences in the form of deductions, credits, and...
The notice and comment process is often touted as a mechanism for establishing political accountabil...
This paper examines the arguments found in what has become known as the anti-tax exceptionalism lite...