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CHAPTER 4 - CRITICAL TAX THEORY MEETS PRACTICE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

Bridget J. Crawford
Affiliation:
Pace University School of Law
Anthony C. Infanti
Affiliation:
School of Law, University of Pittsburgh
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Summary

Moving from theory to practice, the articles in this chapter represent applications of critical tax theory to the nuts and bolts of making, interpreting, and working with the law. In the first piece, A Legislator Named Sue: Re-Imagining the Income Tax, Marjorie Kornhauser imagines a tax system designed and implemented by women. She suggests that female legislators would be guided by an “ethic of care” to change the definition of income, modify the tax base, and create new deductions for workforce reentry costs and child-care expenses. Tax expenditures, in Kornhauser's estimation, likely would be favored in a female-designed tax system in order to benefit dependents and families.

Turning to those who interpret the laws, Daniel Schneider undertakes an empirical study in Using the Social Background Model to Explain Who Wins Federal Appellate Tax Decisions: Do Less Traditional Judges Favor the Taxpayer? In his study, Schneider identifies race, gender, educational status, and other social factors as statistically relevant to the outcome of appellate decisions in tax cases. He hypothesizes that some judges' awareness of racial bias in the Code may account for some pro-taxpayer results. Schneider's work also suggests that Marjorie Kornhauser's instincts are correct: women do appear to approach the tax laws differently than men do.

In Tax Protest, “A Homosexual,” and Frivolity: A Deconstructionist Meditation, Anthony Infanti then explores the collision of traditional judges with nontraditional taxpayers. In his essay, Infanti tells the story of Robert Mueller, a gay man who spent more than a decade protesting the discriminatory treatment of gays and lesbians under the Code.

Type
Chapter
Information
Critical Tax Theory
An Introduction
, pp. 73 - 74
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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