This Article argues that it is misleading to declare the death of tax exceptionalism and that structural tax exceptionalism may have important benefits. Part II provides a brief historical overview of the rise of federal agency administration of statutes and especially tax laws. The history trends to detract from anti-tax and anti-agency rhetoric that counsel disempowering the Treasury Department and other administrative agencies from comprehensively enforcing laws and making policy in their relevant domains. Part III analyzes how the Code\u27s structure for tax administration differs from the APA template for administrative agencies. Part IV deconstructs these differences, drawing from general administrative law scholarship to identify pot...
This Article takes the controversial position that Treasury regulations are entitled to judicial def...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
There is something different about the state sales tax, or so it seems based on judicial decisions c...
This Article argues that it is misleading to declare the death of tax exceptionalism and that struct...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
Traditional perceptions of tax exceptionalism from administrativ–law doctrines and requirements have...
Many courts and academics critique existing tax exceptionalism or the ability of the federal income ...
This paper examines the arguments found in what has become known as the anti-tax exceptionalism lite...
The attitude—common among tax professionals—that tax is special (mostly because of its supposedly un...
This Essay responds to the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium. Its principal content...
Tax law has just not been the same since January 2011. Did Congress pass earthshaking legislation af...
In the early 1980\u27s, Congress faced the mounting problems of tax shelters and other forms of tax ...
This article is an invited reply to an article in the Minnesota Law Review regarding whether the “re...
On September 29, 2009, Treasury issued regulations retroactively extending the six-year limitations ...
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
This Article takes the controversial position that Treasury regulations are entitled to judicial def...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
There is something different about the state sales tax, or so it seems based on judicial decisions c...
This Article argues that it is misleading to declare the death of tax exceptionalism and that struct...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
Traditional perceptions of tax exceptionalism from administrativ–law doctrines and requirements have...
Many courts and academics critique existing tax exceptionalism or the ability of the federal income ...
This paper examines the arguments found in what has become known as the anti-tax exceptionalism lite...
The attitude—common among tax professionals—that tax is special (mostly because of its supposedly un...
This Essay responds to the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium. Its principal content...
Tax law has just not been the same since January 2011. Did Congress pass earthshaking legislation af...
In the early 1980\u27s, Congress faced the mounting problems of tax shelters and other forms of tax ...
This article is an invited reply to an article in the Minnesota Law Review regarding whether the “re...
On September 29, 2009, Treasury issued regulations retroactively extending the six-year limitations ...
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
This Article takes the controversial position that Treasury regulations are entitled to judicial def...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
There is something different about the state sales tax, or so it seems based on judicial decisions c...