Wednesday, December 23, 2020
Columbia's Gillian Lester Is Eighth Law School Dean To Give At Least $100,000 To Students
Dean Gillian Lester and Professor Eric Talley Make Gift to Support Students and Recent Graduates:
Gillian Lester, Dean and Lucy G. Moses Professor of Law, and Eric Talley, Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law, have personally committed $100,000 in support of Columbia Law School students and recent graduates.
“Facilitating broader access to a Columbia Law education and ensuring students can choose a vocation unencumbered by financial considerations have been core pillars of our efforts over the past several years,” said Dean Lester, who launched The Campaign for Columbia Law in 2017. “Eric and I have been proud to support the Law School throughout our time at Columbia, but we’re especially moved by the profound generosity of the many alumni and friends who have stepped up to support our students during this challenging year. It inspired us to lend our own support.”
December 23, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
ABA Tax Section Military VITA Pro Bono Project Seeks Writers For State Tax Guide
From James Steele (Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, Washington, D.C.):
As part of the ABA Tax Section's Military VITA pro bono effort, we have recently taken over an important, ongoing resource for Military VITA sites. We will be updating and maintaining, on a go-forward basis, a State Tax Guide that compiles relevant state income tax topics and issues that are specific to members of the Military. For reference, and as a way to provide a sense of the volunteer commitment, I have attached a sample state from the current version of the Guide. The state-specific guides range from one to four pages, and the volunteer's job is simply to review and make any relevant updates to ensure accuracy and repeat this task each December in preparation for tax season.
We are looking for one or more volunteers to adopt each state with a state income tax, plus Washington, DC, to help review and update the Guide. By dividing the document by state, the time commitment of each volunteer should be very minimal. If you are interested in signing up for more than just your state, we welcome that too. The audience for the Guide is Military members (often with no prior tax background), so we are trying to keep it very readable and limit it to the most common issues. This volunteer opportunity is ideal for new attorneys, retired attorneys, non-attorneys, and anyone in between. It also could be a group effort at a firm. No prior experience is necessary, and the information is easily attainable by researching online.
December 23, 2020 in ABA Tax Section, Tax, Tax News | Permalink | Comments (0)
Muller: Non-JD Enrollment Continues To Climb
Derek Muller (Iowa), Law School 1L JD Enrollment Holds Steady For 7th Straight Year as Non-JD Enrollment Climbs to All-Time Highs:
The 2020 law school enrollment figures have been released. They show a slightly worse first-year JD enrollment and continued growth in non-JD enrollment. Almost 16% of law school enrollees, nearly 1 in 6, are not enrolled in a JD program. ... 21,292 were enrolled in non-JD programs, a 1,400-student jump over last year. It’s now about 16% of all law school enrollment. ...
Here I also highlight a handful of schools with the highest non-JD enrollment as a percentage of total law school enrollment. There are a few heavy-hitters that are driving a lot of the non-JD enrollment.
December 23, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Ed Rankings, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Anyone Who Spends More Than 60 Days In A Single Year In California Would Be Subject To Wealth Tax For Ten Years Under Proposed Bill
Wall Street Journal op-ed: A California Plan to Chase Away the Rich, Then Keep Stalking Them, by Hank Adler (Chapman):
California’s Legislature is considering a wealth tax on residents, part-year residents, and any person who spends more than 60 days inside the state’s borders in a single year. Even those who move out of state would continue to be subject to the tax for a decade—a provision that calls to mind the Eagles’ famous “Hotel California” lyric: “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.”
The California Constitution probably allows a statewide wealth tax on residents, but any effort to create a tax capable of reaching across state borders is likely to run afoul of the U.S. Constitution. Taxing someone who spends only 60 days in the state in any single year—and extending that tax over an ensuing decade—would be something new under the sun.
Each year this tax net would gather up a new crop of taxpayers for the next decade. The range of people it proposes to ensnare is staggering: every student attending college in California, anyone having a major medical procedure at a California hospital and needing an extended in-state recovery period, and those who spend two months in California away from New York or London winters. Under California tax law, there is no distinction between a nonresident from Minnesota and a nonresident from Dubai.
Assembly Bill 2088 proposes calculating the wealth tax based on current world-wide net worth each Dec. 31. For part-year and temporary residents, the tax would be proportionate based on their number of days in California. The annual tax would be on current net worth and therefore would include wealth earned, inherited or obtained through gifts or estates long before and long after leaving the state. ...
December 23, 2020 in Tax, Tax News | Permalink | Comments (0)
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
California Bar To Release Results Of October Bar Exam On January 8
State Bar of California, California Bar Examination:
What happens after I take the exam?
Results from the February bar exam will be released on May 7, 2021. The results for the October bar exam will be released at 6:00 p.m. on January 8, 2021. The State Bar is actively working on shortening the grading timeline so that applicants receive their results on an expedited schedule.
December 22, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Bob Dylan’s Genius Was Rewarded By The Tax Code
Following up on my previous posts:
-
Did Bob Dylan Sell The Copyrights To His 600 Songs To Avoid A Higher Capital Gains Tax Rate In The Biden Administration?
- Bob Dylan’s Catalog Sale Highlights A Tax Advantage For Songwriters
Washington Post op-ed: Bob Dylan’s Genius Was Rewarded by the System — and the Tax Code, by Charles Lane:
[Bob Dylan] just sold the rights to “Blowin’ in the Wind” and 600 other songs to Universal Music Publishing Group for a reported $300 million. Added to his previously reported net worth of $200 million, the transaction implies that Dylan will reach his 80th birthday on May 24 as a half-billionaire.
This is a tribute to his genius and, on the whole, to a political and economic system that rewards artists whether they merely entertain multitudes — or inspire them to march against that same system.
Nevertheless, some socially conscious musician could write a song protesting the Dylan deal, because of what it reveals about that engine of irrationality and inequality known as the U.S. tax system.
December 22, 2020 in Celebrity Tax Lore, Tax, Tax News | Permalink | Comments (0)
Organ: Attrition Analysis For 2018, 2019, 2020 — With A Focus On Ethnicity
My last blog posting on attrition trends was in January 2018 covering attrition data through the 2016-17 academic year (data reported in December 2017). I am writing now to summarize recent trends covering the 2017-18, 2018-19 and 2019-20 academic years.
This blog posting focuses on the 193 fully-accredited ABA law schools outside of Puerto Rico that had first-year attrition data for all three academic years.
I have calculated average attrition rates for the class as a whole and then broken out average attrition rates by law schools in different median LSAT categories — 160+, 155-159, 150-154 and <150. Because attrition data was reported with ethnicity information starting in 2017, this blog also looks at the intersection of ethnicity and attrition for the 2017-18 and 2018-19 and 2019-20 academic years.
In calculating attrition rates, I wanted to capture those students who are no longer in law school anywhere. Thus, for these purposes, “attrition” is the sum of “academic attrition” and “other attrition.” It excludes transfer attrition. “Academic attrition” occurs when a law school asks someone to leave because of inadequate academic performance. “Other attrition” occurs when someone leaves law school for non-academic reasons (and has not transferred to another law school).
1. Overall First-Year Attrition has Declined for Three Years
My January 2018 blog noted that overall first-year attrition (“academic attrition” combined with “other attrition”) increased each year from 2010-11 through the 2015-16 academic year, going from 5.81% to 7.33%, before sliding back to 6.46% in 2016-17. (In this analysis, with a few schools in the process of closing or discontinuing ABA accreditation removed from the database, the overall attrition for 2016-17 decreased to 6.21%.) That downward trend in overall attrition has continued with overall attrition dropping to 6.11% in the 2017-2018 academic year and then to 5.77% in the 2018-19 academic year and finally to 3.41 in the 2019-20 academic year.
Table 1 — Overall First-Year Attrition for Classes Entering in 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
|
Beg. Enrollment |
Academic Attrition |
% Academic |
Other Attrition |
% Other |
Total Attrition |
% Attrition |
|
|
2016-17 |
35,439 |
2199 |
6.21% |
||||
|
2017-18 |
36,288 |
1277 |
3.52 |
941 |
2.59 |
2218 |
6.11% |
|
2018-19 |
37,570 |
1171 |
3.12 |
998 |
2.66 |
2169 |
5.77% |
|
2019-20 |
37,500 |
550 |
1.47 |
729 |
1.94 |
1279 |
3.41% |
The simplest explanation for the increase in overall attrition rates over the period from 2010-11 to 2015-16 and then the decrease in overall attrition rates in 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19 and 2019-20 is the LSAT composition of the entering class. As the percentage of students in the entering class with a high LSAT score of less than 150 increased, the attrition rates increased. Once the percentage of students in the entering class with a high LSAT score of less than 150 began to decrease, the attrition rates decreased. This is explained more clearly in the following discussion.
December 22, 2020 in Jerry Organ, Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
A Simple Regulatory Fix For U.S. Citizenship Taxation
John Richardson, Laura Snyder & Karen Alpert (University of Queensland), A Simple Regulatory Fix for Citizenship Taxation, 169 Tax Notes Fed. 275 (Oct. 12, 2020):
This article explains the simple regulatory actions that United States Department of the Treasury can take that would, in the absence of legislative change, improve the lives of Americans living overseas and permit the IRS to better focus its limited resources to more effectively administer the U.S. tax system.
December 22, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Analysts, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (1)
Monday, December 21, 2020
October 2020 Georgia Bar Exam Results: Georgia #1 For 7th Consecutive Year
Here are the results of the October 2020 Georgia Bar Exam Results for first-time test-takers by law school, along with each school's U.S. News ranking:
|
Bar Pass Rank (Rate) |
School |
US News Rank GA (Overall) |
|
1 (96.4%) |
Georgia |
2 (31) |
|
2 (89.6%) |
Georgia State |
3 (76) |
|
3 (88.8%) |
Emory |
1 (24) |
|
84.6% |
Statewide Avg. (GA Law Schools) |
|
|
4 (83.2%) |
Mercer |
4 (126) |
|
81.0% |
Statewide Avg. (Non-GA Law Schools) |
|
|
5 (56.6%) |
John Marshall |
5 (Tier 2) |
|
6 (40.0%) |
Savannah |
Unranked |
December 21, 2020 in Legal Ed Rankings, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Why States Should Consider Expanding Sales Taxes To Services
Gladriel Shobe (BYU), Grace Stephenson Nielsen (J.D. 2021, BYU), Darien Shanske (UC-Davis) & David Gamage (Indiana), Why States Should Consider Expanding Sales Taxes to Services, Part 1, 98 Tax Notes State 1349 (Dec. 21, 2020):
States are facing a severe budget crisis as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. And with the federal government unlikely to pass a relief bill to address those state budget issues, states will need to play a significant role in making up revenue shortfalls.
This is the first in a three-part series, which is a contribution to Project SAFE: State Action in Fiscal Emergencies. This essay will lay out the general case for why states should consider expanding their sales tax bases to more services as a response to the COVID-19 crisis. The follow-ups will discuss further mechanics and details of how best to accomplish this goal.
December 21, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Analysts, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (5)
Organ: 2020 Legal Ed Data Show Rebound In Transfer Market
This blog posting updates my blog postings over the last several years — 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, regarding what we know about the transfer market. With the ABA’s posting of the 2020 Standard 509 Reports, we now have seven years (2014-2020) of more detailed transfer data from which to glean insights about the transfer market among law schools.
NUMBERS AND PERCENTAGES OF TRANSFERS REBOUND IN 2020
As shown in Table 1 below, the number of transfers in 2020 increased to 1612 (4.2%). For the last several years, the transfer market had been shrinking, having declined from 5.5% in 2014, to 4.7% in 2016, to 4.0% in 2018, and down to 3.4% in 2019. Aside from a slight bump in 2017, this is the first meaningful increase in transfers in many years, although the level is still less than in 2015-2017 when there were more than 1700 transfers.
Table 1 – Number of Transfers and Percentage of Transfers from 2014-2020
|
2014 |
2015 |
2016 |
2017 |
2018 |
2019 |
2020 |
|
|
Number of Transfers |
2187 |
1979 |
1749 |
1797 |
1494 |
1294 |
1612 |
|
Previous Year First Year Enrollment |
39,800 |
38,000 |
37,100 |
37,100 |
37,300 |
38,400 |
38,500 |
|
% of Previous First-Year Total |
5.5% |
5.2% |
4.7% |
4.8% |
4.0% |
3.4% |
4.2% |
Some of this increase is attributable to the students transferring from Concordia to Idaho. Idaho doesn't normally show up on the transfer list, but this year it has 105 transfers as a result of Concordia announcing its closure. But that only explains part of the increase of more than 300 transfers between 2019 and 2020. I believe the most likely additional explanation for this bump in transfers was the financial uncertainty for law schools associated with the Covid-19 pandemic, particularly uncertainty regarding the number of first-year students who would show up at law schools that had announced during the summer a shift to online instruction for the fall semester. With uncertainty regarding first-year enrollment and revenue, some law schools may have hedged by looking for more transfers. For example, Harvard took 65 transfer students — the largest class of transfers it has taken in a number of years. Its entering class this year was only 501 — when it has consistently welcomed 560 students almost every year for the last several years. Knowing it might be welcoming a smaller entering class, I suspect Harvard made a conscious decision to welcome more transfers to counterbalance the loss of revenue from a smaller first-year class. Other law schools on the list that showed an increase between 2019 and 2020 included George Washington (up 22), Berkeley (up 19) and Florida (up 11). Relatedly, some students might have considered transferring because online learning might have made it possible for them to attend another law school without having to move, such that the transaction costs of transferring might have seemed smaller than in prior years. And if students were going to be taking online courses anyway at the law school at which they started, why not transfer and take online courses at a law school that is more highly ranked.
SOME LAW SCHOOLS CONTINUE TO DOMINATE THE TRANSFER MARKET
Table 2 lists the top 15 law schools participating in the transfer market in descending order in Summer 2017 (fall 2016 entering class), Summer 2018 (fall 2017 entering class), Summer 2019 (fall 2018 entering class), and Summer 2020 (fall 2019 entering class). The nine law schools on the list all four years include Cal. Berkeley, Columbia, Florida, Georgetown, George Washington, Harvard, Loyola Marymount, NYU, UCLA. Arizona State and Northwestern have been on the list three of the four years.
December 21, 2020 in Jerry Organ, Law School, Law School Rankings, Legal Ed News, Legal Ed Rankings, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
TaxProf Blog Weekend Roundup
Saturday:
- This Week's Ten Most Popular TaxProf Blog Posts
- Fall 2020 Law School Enrollment Increased 2.4% (+1.5% JD, +7.4% Non-JD); 1L Enrollment Fell 0.2%
- California Bar Flags Over 3,000 Applicants For Video Review Of Their Online Exams; Deans Request That Applicants Be Permitted To Sit For February Exam As They Await Resolution
- Jensen: Valuing Tuition Waivers For Tax Purposes
Sunday:
- LSAC: The Fall 2020 Law School Class ... And An Early Look At The Incoming Fall 2021 Class
- More On The Controversy Over 'Dr.' Jill Biden
- The Paradox Of Faculty-Student Interactions
- The Top Five New Tax Papers
December 21, 2020 in Legal Education, Tax, Weekend Roundup | Permalink | Comments (0)
Sunday, December 20, 2020
LSAC: The Fall 2020 Law School Class ... And An Early Look At The Incoming Fall 2021 Class
Kellye Y. Testy (President & CEO, LSAC), Starting Law School Amid a Pandemic: The Incoming Class of 2020 (the following is excerpted from a longer post on LSAC’s Law:Fully blog):
Not only did a class of law students graduate in 2020 amid the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic, a new class also just began their studies during this “one-of-a-kind” year. What do we know about this intrepid group? Each fall, LSAC works closely with the ABA Section on Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar and law schools across the United States to compile enrollment data for the incoming class of law students. This aggregated “Standard 509” data provides a snapshot of the size and make-up of the incoming class, including number of students, full- and part-time status, racial, ethnic, and gender information, as well as LSAT score and undergraduate GPA by quartiles for each law school. This data also provides an opportunity to look at areas of progress and emerging trends that could affect the future of legal education and our justice system more broadly. ...
When using maximum reporting, LSAC’s preferred reporting method because it captures all the racial and ethnic categories in which a candidate self-identifies, Black/African American students comprise 9.7% of 2020 matriculants, compared to 9.5% in 2019 and 9.7% in 2018. Hispanic/Latinx students make up 12.4% of this year’s incoming class, up from 11.8% in 2019 and 11.5% in 2018. ...
It is still early in the 2021 application cycle, but according to LSAC data, we are seeing very significant growth in terms of the overall number of applicants and applications, with strong growth across all demographic groups.
As of today, the total number of JD applicants is up 38.2% compared to this time last year.
December 20, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
More On The Controversy Over 'Dr.' Jill Biden
LawProfBlawg (Anonymous Professor, Top 100 Law School), Dr. Biden And That Op-Ed: Funny How the 'Dr.' Thing and the 'Hierarchy' Thing Are Related:
Dear Law Professors:
It started with yet another “Let’s not call her Dr.” hit piece. The kind that has been written before, many times. No, I’m not going to link to it.
Then came the style guides, which showed that only those with an M.D. should be called doctor. As if to say that makes it perfectly okay to publish the hit piece. I’m missing the part of the style guide where newspapers call Ph.D.s “kiddo.” Maybe you can help me find it. ...
Oh, just as an aside: I see law professors be dismissive of Ph.D.s every f**king day. I mean, unless they want to hire someone with a Ph.D./J.D. Then it’s OMG GUSH so IMPRESSIVE. Want to guess who that usually benefits? Want to guess where their J.D.s usually come from? ...
You see, this isn’t just about Dr. Biden. It is about the microaggressions that women face every day. The slights to their expertise. The fact that you’ll find any f**king excuse not to call her Dr. just because it offends you. But thanks for the nice discussion of disparate impact with your “I only call M.D.s doctors” standards. Want to look at THAT data?
It’s about how when the hierarchy is challenged by minorities and women making inroads, it means somehow that the achievements mean less somehow because it isn’t the coveted prize of only white men.
Eugene Volokh (UCLA), Who Should Be Called Dr.? Probably Not Jill Biden, Just as Lawyers Like Me Aren't:
I didn't much care for the Wall Street Journal op-ed that said Jill Biden shouldn't be referred to using the title "Dr." Certainly calling a grown stranger (and especially the soon-to-be First Lady) "kiddo," even as a joke, seems disrespectful; nor is her using the "Dr." title "fraudulent" or "comic."
Nonetheless, the view that Jill Biden should be called "Dr." because she earned her Ed.D. strikes me as unsound, too.
Steven Lubet (Northwestern) & Andrew Koppelman (Northwestern), That Op-Ed About Jill Biden Is Awful. Northwestern’s Response Might Be Worse.:
Last week the essayist Joseph Epstein provoked an uproar by writing a silly Wall Street Journal piece saying that Jill Biden, who has a doctorate in education — formally, an Ed.D. — should stop using the honorific “Dr.” The essay was rude and condescending to the next first lady, referring to her as “kiddo” and calling her dissertation “unpromising.”
But what happened next is also “unpromising.” Northwestern University’s English department’s website published a poorly composed denunciation, obviously intended to retaliate for Epstein’s loutish opinion. A spokesman for the university saw fit to announce that “while we firmly support academic freedom and freedom of expression, we do not agree with Mr. Epstein’s opinion.” Most alarmingly, Epstein’s name abruptly disappeared from the department’s website. Epstein was a visiting lecturer at Northwestern from 1974 to 2002, and as late as last week he was listed on the department website as an “emeritus lecturer.”
As current law-school faculty members at Northwestern, specializing in constitutional law (Koppelman) and professional responsibility (Lubet), we believe that it is a serious violation of academic freedom to penalize a faculty member, including an emeritus one, for expressing unpopular views. ...
Almost every American university has distressing incidents in its history, such as the exploitation of enslaved labor and construction on stolen land. An honest accounting requires reckoning with history, not erasing it, and that includes even the trivial recognition of those who have held teaching positions. Northwestern’s own motto begins “Quaecumque sunt vera,” meaning “Whatsoever things are true.” It may be uncomfortable, but it is nonetheless true that Joseph Epstein is an emeritus lecturer in English at Northwestern University.
Chronicle of Higher Education, That Op-Ed About Jill Biden Was Sexist. But the Real Problem Lies Deeper.:
December 20, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (8)
The Paradox Of Faculty-Student Interactions
Meera E. Deo (Thomas Jefferson), The Paradox of Faculty-Student Interactions, 68 J. Legal Educ. ___ (2020):
Women of color in legal academia have a complicated relationship with students, as evidenced by empirical data. Most of these professors have strong positive relationships with students from all backgrounds. In fact, this accessibility can result in service overload with constant student meetings and events that are rarely acknowledged or rewarded by colleagues or administrators. Furthermore, the few students who push back in the classroom and on course evaluations not only drain the energy and effort of their women of color professors but also shroud the learning environment in tension and negativity.
December 20, 2020 in Legal Ed Scholarship, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
The Top Five New Tax Papers
There is a bit of movement in this week's list of the Top 5 Recent Tax Paper Downloads, with a new #1 paper and a paper returning to the list at #5:
[737 Downloads] A Simple Regulatory Fix for Citizenship Taxation, by John Richardson, Laura Snyder & Karen Alpert (University of Queensland)
- [513 Downloads] State Aid: The General Court Decision in Apple, by Stephen Daly (King's College London) & Ruth Mason (Virginia) (reviewed by Young Ran (Christine) Kim (Utah) here)
- [360 Downloads] Federal Tax Procedure (2020 Practitioner Ed.), by John Townsend
- [343 Downloads] Tax Treaty Negotiations: Myth and Reality, by Yariv Brauner (Florida)
- [266 Downloads] Is It Time to Eliminate Federal Corporate Income Taxes?, by Edward Lane (Albany) & Randall Wray (UMKC)
December 20, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship, Top 5 Downloads | Permalink | Comments (0)
Saturday, December 19, 2020
This Week's Ten Most Popular TaxProf Blog Posts
- William Jacobson (Cornell), Four Student Groups Demand That Harvard Discipline Law Prof Adrian Vermeule For Tweets Mocking Leftists
- Julie Reuben (Harvard), Where Academic Freedom Ends
- Wall Street Journal, Hit By Covid-19, Colleges Do The Unthinkable And Cut Tenure
- Bryan Camp (Texas Tech), Lesson From The Tax Court: Taxpayer Who Got $1.6m Assessment Reduced To $170k Not Entitled To Costs
- Wisconsin Public Radio, Marquette To Cut 225 Faculty And Staff As Part Of 25% Reduction In Academic Spending; $12 Million Budget Surplus To Be Used For Strategic Priorities
- David Hope & Julian Limberg (London School of Economics & Political Science), Fifty Years Of Tax Cuts For The Rich Didn’t Trickle Down
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), UCLA Dean Jennifer Mnookin Donates Kidney To Her Father
- Bryan Camp (Texas Tech), Lesson From The Tax Court: Taxpayers Behaving Badly (2020)
- National Jurist, Law Schools That Overperform On The Bar Exam
- Bryan Camp (Texas Tech), A Year Of Lessons From The Tax Court (2020)
December 19, 2020 in About This Blog, Legal Education, Tax, Weekly Top 10 TaxProf Blog Posts | Permalink | Comments (0)
Fall 2020 Law School Enrollment Increased 2.4% (+1.5% JD, +7.4% Non-JD); 1L Enrollment Fell 0.2%
ABA Website Updates Data on Law School Admissions, Tuition and Other Matters:
Information about fall 2020 admissions and other matters reported by American Bar Association-approved law schools to the ABA Section on Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar is now publicly available. The information is required to be made public under Standard 509 of the Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools.
The spreadsheets, explanatory information and the ABA's database of Standard 509 reports, as they are known, are available at www.abarequireddisclosures.org. Some of this information has been collected and summarized on the section's website in its Statistics section under 2020 Standard 509 Data Overview. It shows that total J.D. enrollment for 2020 was up by 1.5% from the previous year. First-year enrollment was essentially flat, declining by 81 students.
2020 Standard 509 Information Report Data Overview (posted 12/18/2020):
ABA-approved law schools are required to post their Standard 509 Information Reports on their websites as part of their ABA Required Disclosures, annually by December 15. The ABA Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar website provides access to that information for all law schools, including downloadable spreadsheets of aggregate data that the law schools report. The Section is also providing spreadsheets on a school-by-school basis that report applicant data and LSAT and UGPA information for each school’s 1L matriculants, changes in the 1L classes on a school-by-school basis, and other information. These data come from the annual questionnaires that ABA-approved law schools file with the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar’s Managing Director’s Office.
As the chart below summarizes, 197 law schools that are approved by the ABA to confer the Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree reported total J.D. enrollment of 114,520 for the Fall 2020 term. This is an increase of 1,638 students (1.5 percent) from 2019. An additional 21,292 students were enrolled in other than J.D. degree programs (LL.M., masters and certificate programs). This is an increase of 1,473 (7.4 percent) from 2019. This brings the total law school enrollment for Fall 2020 to 135,812, an increase of 3,128 (2.4 percent).
December 19, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
California Bar Flags Over 3,000 Applicants For Video Review Of Their October Online Exams; Deans Request That Applicants Be Permitted To Sit For February Exam As They Await Resolution
ABA Journal, Thousands of California Bar Exam Takers Have Video Files Flagged For Review:
More than 3,000 people who sat for the State Bar of California’s remote October exam had their proctoring videos flagged for review, and dozens report receiving violation notices from the agency’s office of admissions.
Applicants say the issues flagged are largely technological, and many claim they had no indication of a problem until they received violation notices. ...
During a Dec. 4 meeting of the California Committee of Bar Examiners, Tammy Campbell, a program manager with the bar, reported that 8,920 applicants took the exam online. Of that group, she said, 3,190—nearly 36%—of the test-takers had their videos flagged for review. ...
Megan Zavieh, an ethics lawyer who defends clients against State Bar of California charges, says she had signed on 19 clients who received Chapter 6 notices and fielded phone calls from many other prospective clients in the same situation as of late Thursday. ...
Several law school deans on Thursday sent a letter to the state bar, urging it to allow people to sit for the February 2021 bar while they are challenging the notices.
Above the Law, California Bar Exam Flagged A THIRD Of Applicants As Cheating
State Bar of California, Post Bar Exam FAQs
Letter to Donna S. Hershkowitz, Interim Executive Director, State Bar of California (Dec. 17, 2020):
Two issues relating to the Chapter 6 Notice of Violation of Examination Rules or Policies process, which was outlined at the December 10, 2020, Annual Law School Assembly meeting, have come to our attention. As discussed more fully below, we respectfully urge the State Bar to allow persons challenging notices of violation to sit for the February Bar Exam, and to allow such persons to view videos of alleged violations when responding to notices.
During the December 10th meeting, the State Bar notified attendees that its staff is in the process of reviewing 3,190 flagged proctoring videos from the October administration of the California Bar Examination—i.e., more than one-third of all test-takers were flagged for possible violations. The State Bar gave no indication of what standards it would impose to assess whether the flagged conduct warrants a Chapter 6 notice and we have no information as regards the number of candidates that have (or can be expected) to receive a Chapter 6 notice.
At the meeting, State Bar staff explained that upon receipt of a Chapter 6 notice, an applicant has ten days to respond in writing. After the State Bar receives the response, staff look into the matter further and decide whether the applicant should be sanctioned. If an applicant receives a sanction for a disputable violation, the applicant may request an appeal. According to Admissions and Educational Standards Rule 4.71(B), “An examination score may be held in abeyance pending resolution of the matter.” However, during the meeting, the State Bar staff stated that if an applicant requests an appeal, the applicant’s bar exam score will be held in abeyance. This means that the applicant will not know their score and the applicant will not be allowed to timely register for the February 2021 bar examination before the matter is resolved.
December 19, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Jensen: Valuing Tuition Waivers For Tax Purposes
Erik M. Jensen (Case Western), Valuing Tuition Waivers for Tax Purposes, 45 J.C. & U.L. 289 (2020):
Some tuition waivers provided by universities to employees or family members of employees are taxable benefits; that is often the case for waivers in graduate and professional programs. This article argues that the method used by many universities to value the benefit for tax purposes—treating the tuition sticker price as if it measured value—is an incorrect reading of tax law. Because sticker price generally exceeds fair market value, the result is more taxable income to employees who “benefit” from waivers than should be the case—to the obvious detriment of the employees but also to the detriment of the universities, which may lose good students and employees to other institutions.
December 19, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
Friday, December 18, 2020
Weekly SSRN Tax Article Review And Roundup: Eyal-Cohen Reviews Tax Benefits, Higher Education and Race By Crawford & Gerzog
This week, Mirit Eyal-Cohen (Alabama) reviews Bridget J. Crawford (Pace) and Wendy C. Gerzog (Baltimore), Tax Benefits, Higher Education and Race: A Gift Tax Proposal for Direct Tuition Payments (Dec. 2020):
Amid recent nationwide protests and public condemnation of systemic racism, Americans are divided on whether this focus on the race and inequality gap will actually lead to major policy change. This product of collaboration between renowned tax crit Bridget Crawford and gift and estate tax expert Wendy Gerzog yields not only an admirable scholarly inquiry into the correlation between tax, race, and higher education, but also a practical proposal for policy reform to reduce race-based economic inequality. Using the case study of gift tax exemption for direct tuition payments, the Authors illustrate the ways tax rules can aggravate the racial wealth gap and put together a primer to fix the advantage most affluent taxpayers in the U.S. receive through educational tax benefits.
December 18, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship, Weekly SSRN Roundup, Weekly Tax Roundup | Permalink | Comments (0)
Tax Policy In The Trump Administration
- American Prospect, Can Corporate Tax Incentives Revive a Pandemic Economy? New Jersey Thinks They Can.
- American Prospect, The Day One Agenda for Corporate Taxes
- Bloomberg, Biden Gets Prodded From Left on Tax Hikes That Now Look Unlikely
- Bloomberg, Rich States Uncover Tax Windfall, Undercutting Push for Aid
- Bloomberg, What Happens When the 1% Go Remote
December 18, 2020 in Tax, Tax Policy in the Trump Administration | Permalink | Comments (0)
Weekly Legal Education Roundup
- ABA Journal, Do law students, professors and administrators agree on challenges of online learning?
- Paul Caron (Dean, Pepperdine), UCLA Dean Jennifer Mnookin Donates Kidney To Her Father
- Cleveland Scene op-ed: The Case for Changing the Name of Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
- Michael Conklin (Angelo State University), The Longer They Are, the More Citations They Receive: How Impact Factor Punishes Concise Scholarship
- Darby Dickerson (Dean, UIC John Marshall Law School), AALS President’s Message, Abolish the Academic Caste System
December 18, 2020 in Legal Education, Scott Fruehwald, Weekly Legal Ed Roundup | Permalink | Comments (0)
Purdue Announces 10th Straight Year Of Flat Tuition
Purdue Announces 10th Straight Year of Flat Tuition:
“Unprecedented” has been used often in 2020. Purdue University is using it yet again – as the university announces it will keep its West Lafayette campus tuition frozen — at 2012-13 levels — through at least 2022-23, marking 10 straight years of no tuition increase — unprecedented at Purdue and in higher education during modern times.
President Mitch Daniels first announced that the university would not increase tuition in spring 2013, shortly after he became the 12th president of Purdue University. Before that, Purdue tuition had increased every year since 1976, and it rose an average of nearly 6% per year from 2002 through 2012.
Since 2013, Purdue students and their families have seen tuition remain flat and room and board rates drop from second highest in the Big Ten to the most affordable. Today, they pay less for total cost of attendance than they did in 2012.
December 18, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (1)
Syracuse Symposium: Online Learning And The Future of Legal Education
Symposium, Online Learning And The Future of Legal Education, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 1- 203 (2020):
Nina Kohn (Syracuse), Online Learning and The Future of Legal Education: Symposium Introduction, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 1 (2020)
- Eric S. Janus (Former Dean, Mitchell Hamline), “The Worst Idea Ever!”- Lessons from One Law School’s Pioneering Embrace of Online Learning Methods, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 13 (2020)
- James McGrath (Dean, WMU-Thomas Cooley) & Andrew Morriss (Dean, Texas A&M School of Innovation), Online Legal Education & Access to Legal Education & the Legal System, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 49 (2020)
- Margaret Ryznar (Indiana-Indianapolis) & Yvonne M. Dutton (Indiana-Indianapolis), Lighting a Fire: The Power of Intrinsic Motivation in Online Teaching, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 73 (2020)
- Michael Hunter Schwartz (McGeorge), Towards a Modality-Less Model for Excellence in Law School Teaching, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 115 (2020)
- Victoria Sutton (Texas Tech), Asynchronous E-Learning in Legal Education: A Comparative Study with the Traditional Classroom, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 143 (2020)
- Noelle Wall Sweany (Texas A&M), From Theory to Practice: Evidence-Based Strategies for Designing and Developing Engaging Online Courses, 70 Syracuse L. Rev. 169 (2020)
December 18, 2020 in Conferences, Legal Ed Conferences, Legal Ed Scholarship, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (1)
The Women In Economics Index 2020
The Women In Economics Index: Tracking Progression In Economics:
The Women In Economics Initiative was established to advance gender equality in the field of economics. Our goal is to encourage equal opportunity and balanced representation of genders in the economics profession across the academic, business and public sectors.
December 18, 2020 in Tax, Tax News | Permalink | Comments (0)
California Deans Ask That Students Who Passed California Bar Be Admitted To D.C. Bar
Letter to Shela Shanks, Director, Committee on Admissions and the Unauthorized Practice of Law, District of Columbia Courts (Dec. 17, 2020):
Dear Director Shanks,
We write in the hopes that you might reconsider this year’s rule prohibiting those who sat for and passed the California Bar Exam in October 2020 from obtaining licensure in the District of Columbia without sitting for the D.C. exam. We understand that the California Bar Examiners have not pursued reciprocity with the District, and that this may have influenced your decision. We also understand that this year’s online exam format in many states, without a normal full MBE, may have factored into the recent rule change.
Given the unprecedented effects that the ongoing global pandemic is having on the careers of recent law graduates, we urge you to consider the burden this new rule places on individuals who took the most recent California Bar Exam. Many students sat for the California bar expecting that, as in previous years, they would be able to waive into the District of Columbia using their MBE scores, and did not learn of the rule change until after registration deadlines had passed. Compared to their peers who either passed the exam in another jurisdiction with which D.C. practices reciprocity, or who did not take an exam at all and are allowed to practice under supervision, those who are awaiting results from the October California exam must now devote additional time and money preparing for the next D.C. exam after just beginning jobs delayed by the pandemic. While under normal circumstances we could appreciate your interest in allowing waivers only between D.C. and those states which practice reciprocity, or based on a normal transferable MBE score, these are not ordinary circumstances. It also seems puzzling to allow supervised practice for those who have not taken and passed any bar exam, but to prohibit it for those who passed the California bar, notably one of the hardest bars to pass. We would be very grateful were you to reconsider in order to avoid the inconsistencies and burdens that the current situation presents.
Sincerely,
Paul L. Caron
Duane and Kelly Roberts Dean and Professor of Law
Pepperdine University Rick J. Caruso School of Law
Erwin Chemerinsky
Dean and Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law
University of California, Berkeley School of Law
December 18, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (1)
Lipman: What National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson Did For America's Kids And Their Families
Francine J. Lipman (UNLV), Humanizing the Tax System: What National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson Did For America's Kids and their Families, 18 Pitt. Tax Rev. ___ (2020):
At their core, taxpayer rights are human rights. They are about our inherent humanity. — Nina E. Olson
The federal income tax system does not exist for statutes, regulations, codes, enforcement, assessments, collection, redistribution, procedures, publications, liens, levies, refunds, liabilities, litigation, compliance, or even revenue. At its core, the federal income tax system exists for people. People like you, me, and all our loved ones including spouses, partners, parents, kids, brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews, grandparents, grandkids, friends, and neighbors. The people who eat at our tables and sleep under our roofs. The tax system is about current and future generations who live and work in America, and even those who don’t but have the coveted prize of U.S. citizenship. It is about our shared vision of ensuring the well-being of all people, young, old, Black, Brown, White, Asian, Native, multiracial, religious, atheist, agnostic, male, female, transgender, straight, queer, or nonconforming. It is about ensuring that the people of and in America have what they need to survive and thrive, especially those who are vulnerable for any reason or no reason at all. Tax systems, like other government institutions, should be designed and administered to make life better for everyone. Because “we the people” are America, the beautiful, the federal tax system serves us. This is the truth that Nina E. Olson laid bare during her eighteen years of service as the longest-serving National Taxpayer Advocate (NTA).
December 18, 2020 in IRS News, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thursday, December 17, 2020
The Law Of High-Wealth Exceptionalism
Allison Anna Tait (Richmond), The Law of High-Wealth Exceptionalism, 71 Ala. L. Rev. 981 (2020):
No family is an island. But some families would like to be – at least when it comes to wealth preservation – and they depend on what this Article calls the law of high-wealth exceptionalism to facilitate their success. The law of high-wealth exceptionalism has been forged, over the years, from the twinned scripts of wealth management and family wealth law, both of which constitute high-wealth families as sovereign entities capable of self-regulation and deserving of exemption from the rules that govern ordinary-wealth families. Consequently, high-wealth families take advantage of complicated estate planning techniques and highly favorable wealth rules in order build walls around their family fortunes and construct bespoke governance systems. Hiding in plain sight, the law of high-wealth exceptionalism protects, privileges, and enables high-wealth families in their own particular form of organizational sovereignty.
December 17, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (1)
Property Tax Foreclosure And Predatory Cities
Bernadette Atuahene (Chicago-Kent), Predatory Cities, 108 Cal. L. Rev. 107 (2020):
Between 2011 and 2015, the Wayne County Treasurer completed the property tax foreclosure process for one in four properties in Detroit, Michigan. No other American city has experienced this elevated rate of property tax foreclosures since the Great Depression. Studies reveal that the City of Detroit systematically and illegally inflated the assessed value of most of its residential properties, which led to inflated property tax bills unaffordable to many homeowners. Extraordinary tax foreclosure rates and extensive dispossession resulted. Consequently, Detroit has become a “predatory city”—a new and important sociolegal concept that this Article develops.
This Article is the first attempt to understand the intersecting economic, social, and political factors that have caused these struggling cities to become predatory.
December 17, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
The Longer They Are, The More Citations They Receive: How Impact Factor Punishes Concise Legal Scholarship
Michael Conklin (Angelo State University), The Longer They Are, the More Citations They Receive: How Impact Factor Punishes Concise Scholarship:
One does not need to be a highly cited legal scholar to conclude that — since impact factor is measured per article and longer articles are more likely to garner citations — impact factor incentivizes the publication of longer articles. And for anyone unable to make the connection, none other than the Washington & Lee Law Journal Rankings (W&LLJR) website explicitly spells this out. The second sentence of the impact factor methodology page explains, “Impact Factor rankings should be considered with caution, as they are biased against journals that publish a larger number of concise articles, such as book reviews.” The relationship between article length and impact factor — despite being significant and salient — receives no coverage in the literature on citation-count criticism. This Article first explains the significance of impact factor not only to law journal rankings but also to law school rankings. It then chronicles existing criticism of citation-count metrics.
December 17, 2020 in Legal Ed Scholarship, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
The Case For Removing John Marshall's Name From Cleveland State Law School
Following up on my previous post, Law Schools In Chicago And Cleveland Consider Removing Chief Justice John Marshall From Their Names: Cleveland Scene op-ed: The Case for Changing the Name of Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, by Taru Taylor:
The City of Cleveland finds itself in the middle of our world reckoning over race. Ever since the death of George Floyd on May 25th, the right and wrong sides of history have come into focus. More Confederate monuments have fallen stateside, of course. But how about those images of British protesters throwing the statue of Edward Colston, a seventeenth-century slave trader, into the River Thames? ...
Paul Dolan, owner of the Cleveland Indians, just announced on Monday that: “[Indians is] a name that had its time, but this is not the time now, and certainly going forward, the name is no longer acceptable in our world.” He probably took note of the Washington Football Team, formerly known as the “Redskins.” ...
Cleveland-Marshall College of Law faces a similar reckoning. It is named for John Marshall, the fourth chief justice of the Supreme Court, (1801 – 1835). Early in his tenure he authored the majority opinion in Marbury v. Madison (1803), which established judicial review. By giving the Court power to declare legislative acts and executive actions unconstitutional, he became a veritable unnamed co-author of all subsequent landmark decisions. Without Marbury, there could be no Dred Scott nor Brown. It's hard to overstate his influence.
But the Virginian slave lord owned 200 slaves and at one point auctioned off some of them to pay off his son’s debts. He heard roughly 50 cases involving slavery during his 34-year tenure as chief justice. His jurisprudence was always pro-slavery, even when stare decisis, the rule that judges should abide by decided cases and apply their rules, favored the Black litigant. Nor did public policy, insofar as it supported Black freedom, ever persuade Marshall to rule for the Negro. ...
December 17, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (1)
Law Schools That Overperform On The Bar Exam
Following up on my previous posts (links below): National Jurist, Bar Exam Standouts: A New Study Identifies Law Schools Whose Graduates Overperform On That Crucial Test:
The bar exam is the price of admittance for those who want to practice law, and passing the dreaded exam, particularly on the first try, is far from a given.
In 2019, statistics show, 79.6% of first-time test-takers passed the bar in their states. That means more than 20% of law grads failed, and that’s a big number given how much time and money they had invested.
When Paul Caron became dean of Pepperdine Caruso School of Law in Malibu, Calif., in 2017, improving the school’s bar passage rate was a top priority.
“Historically our students had done much better on the California bar exam than their incoming LSAT scores and undergraduate GPAs would have predicted,” Caron said. “But around 2015, we had begun to see a slump.”
In an effort to turn things around, Caron hired a new director of academic excellence to expand the school’s bar prep efforts and provide additional support and mentorship to students.
And it worked. The school’s bar passage rate went from 87.2% within two years of graduation in 2015 to 91.4% within one year of graduation in 2018.
“While it helps to have entering 1Ls with top LSAT scores and undergraduate GPAs, there is also a definite correlation between how well a school prepares its students and the school’s bar passage rate,” Caron said.
December 17, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (2)
Johnson & Johnson Debate Gitlitz
Point: Calvin H. Johnson (Texas), The Supreme Court’s Statutory Interpretation in Gitlitz: A Failed Approach to Interpretation and a Bad Decision, 40 ABA Tax Times (Fall 2020):
The Supreme Court’s decision in Gitlitz v. Commissioner is an irresponsible decision disrupting the logic of tax for the benefit only of abuse. In Gitlitz the Supreme Court gave the equivalent of a double deduction, both an appropriate exclusion of cancellation of indebtedness income for an insolvent Subchapter S corporation and also an inappropriate increase in shareholder basis. The combination of the exclusion and shareholder basis generated a tax loss that had no economic substance, a loss that in Judge Posner’s wonderful phrase “did not impinge on the world.” ...
The approach in Gitlitz allowing an absurd tax deduction shows a hostility to the tax system that is inappropriate for a court in its role as a faithful servant. There are fundamental principles underlying the tax law, including antagonism to double deductions and deduction of phantom losses. The Supreme Court has a duty to interpret tax law in favor of coherent principle, and Gitlitz violates fundamental principle.
Counterpoint: Steve Johnson (Florida State), The Constitution Is More Important than a Few Tax Dollars Squandered by Congress: Gitlitz Was Correctly Decided, 40 ABA Tax Times (Fall 2020):
Gitlitz was decided two decades ago, and its practical import was rapidly nullified when Congress amended the statute to remove the glitch in the statute Congress originally enacted. That being so, is Gitlitz worth our time and thought today? Yes, it is. In Gitlitz, the Supreme Court reminded us that the constitutional separation of powers principle is for the long term and should not be eroded by yielding to temptations of the moment.
My respect for Professor Calvin Johnson is great, but so is my conviction that, in this instance, his view is unwise.
December 17, 2020 in ABA Tax Section, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (1)
White Privilege, Fatal Flaws And A Plot Twist: A Dispatch From The American Dream
TaxProf Blog op-ed: White Privilege, Fatal Flaws And A Plot Twist: A Dispatch From The American Dream, by Jeffrey R. Baker (Pepperdine) (reprinted with permission from the Mississippi Free Press):
My dad and his twin brother were born in a sharecropper’s shack in the summer of 1948. Nobody knew they’d be twins; if the family didn’t have indoor plumbing they for sure didn’t have prenatal care. They were the last two of four living children born to Frank and Etta Lee. Frank had a fourth-grade education, which was more than Etta Lee had. They would be the last of a long line of poor white farmers in the Arkansas Delta.
In 1951, my grandparents heard about better work from some migrant cousins, packed up and moved to Indianapolis for a job in a brass-pipe factory, the move that would change trajectories for generations. Grandpa joined a union, went to work inside and qualified for a FHA loan.
He and Etta Lee bought a house, 900 square feet with an indoor toilet for the first time in their lives. The kids didn’t have to chop cotton again. They all graduated from high school and stepped up some big rungs on the American Dream ladder. They owned diners, managed factory floors and became a sheriff’s deputy. Their kids, my cousins, built on those foundations as a Marine, Airman, nurse, educator, firefighter, manager and more.
My dad joined the Army, learned to fly helicopters, went to Vietnam, and came home with two purple hearts. He made his way back to the Delta and learned to fly crop-dusters, then joined his uncle dusting cotton fields over north Alabama. My mom met him while she was working at a department store when she was in college.
This is where it gets good for me. They got married, and I was born in a hospital, not in a cotton field.
December 17, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Cantley: Captive Insurance Companies
Beckett G. Cantley (Northeastern), FAQ: Anti-Avoidance Law & Estate Planning with Captives:
This article seeks to address how general judicial anti-avoidance law may be applied to estate planning with IRC 831(b) captive insurance companies.
Beckett G. Cantley (Northeastern), Calculating Captive Insurance Settlement Initiative Benefits:
December 17, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Fifty Years Of Tax Cuts For The Rich Didn’t Trickle Down, Study Says
David Hope & Julian Limberg (London School of Economics & Political Science), The Economic Consequences of Major Tax Cuts for the Rich:
This paper uses data from 18 OECD countries over the last five decades to estimate the causal effect of major tax cuts for the rich on income inequality, economic growth, and unemployment. First, we use a new encompassing measure of taxes on the rich to identify instances of major reductions in tax progressivity. Then, we look at the causal effect of these episodes on economic outcomes by applying a nonparametric generalization of the difference-in-differences indicator that implements Mahalanobis matching in panel data analysis. We find that major reforms reducing taxes on the rich lead to higher income inequality as measured by the top 1% share of pre-tax national income. The effect remains stable in the medium term. In contrast, such reforms do not have any significant effect on economic growth and unemployment.
December 16, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax News, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (1)
Yin: Repairing The Tax Privacy Rules
George K. Yin (Virginia), Repairing the Tax Privacy Rules, 169 Tax Notes Fed. 1485 (Nov. 30, 2020):
For almost four years, the nation has experienced numerous governmental deviations from rules and norms that have exposed gaps or weaknesses in many areas of law. This article describes needed changes in three tax privacy areas: access and disclosure of presidential tax information; civil enforcement of congressional subpoenas; and confidentiality protections for tax return information obtained by subpoena.
December 16, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Analysts, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
NALP: 2020 Summer Associate Programs Shrank, But 97% Offer Rate Near All-Time High
NALP Finds Offer and Acceptance Rates Remain High, Despite Virtual, Shorter Summer Programs:
New findings from the National Association for Law Placement, Inc. (NALP) show that despite the shift at law firms to virtual and shortened summer programs in 2020, offer and acceptance rates remained near or at historical highs, but summer program class sizes continued to shrink.
[T]he Report on the Survey of Legal Employers on Summer 2020 Outcomes and First-Year Associate Plans. ... includes analyses on summer programs and first-year associate plans from a survey administered in fall 2020, and a separate survey focused on recruiting outcomes and lateral hiring will take place in spring 2021. Below are
some key takeaways from the 2020 report.
Summer 2020 Programs: Format and Outcomes
- Over 86% of summer 2020 programs were entirely virtual, 8% were a hybrid model of some in-person and some virtual programming, and 6% were entirely in-person programs.
- The average summer program length in 2020 was 5.6 weeks, compared to 9.7 weeks for these same offices in 2019.
- The aggregate offer rate coming out of summer 2020 programs (inclusive of both summer programs that were held and those that were canceled) was nearly 97%, just below last year’s historic high of nearly 98%. Offer rates for summer programs that were held (97.0%) were somewhat higher compared to those that were canceled (93.3%).
- The overall acceptance rate on these offers reached an historic high of 87.8%, up slightly from 87.5% in 2018 and 2019, and remained significantly higher than the pre-Great Recession norms of 73% to 77%. Acceptance rates for summer programs that were held (88.0%) were slightly higher compared to those that were canceled (85.6%).
December 16, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Towards A More Ethical LL.M. Degree: Let's Give International Lawyers The Value They Deserve
Carrie W. Teitcher (Brooklyn) & Kathleen Darvil (Brooklyn), Towards a More Ethical LL.M. Degree: Let's Give International Lawyers the Value They Deserve, 31 Fla. J. Int'l L. 55 (2019):
Created for international lawyers seeking American credentials, LL.M. programs have proliferated, filling a need in an increasingly global market. Yet the American Bar Association offers no guidance as to how programs specifically designed for international lawyers should be structured. The road to a more ethical LL.M degree necessarily begins with the American Bar Association and the need for it to establish guidelines for such programs, at least for those programs which qualify international lawyers to sit for the bar exam.
December 16, 2020 in Legal Ed Scholarship, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (1)
SSRN Tax Professor Rankings
SSRN has updated its monthly ranking of 750 American and international law school faculties and 3,000 law professors by (among other things) the number of paper downloads from the SSRN database. Here is the new list (through December 1, 2020) of the Top 25 U.S. Tax Professors in two of the SSRN categories: all-time downloads and recent downloads (within the past 12 months):
| All-Time | Recent | |||
| 1 | Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan) | 194,887 | Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan) | 7,703 |
| 2 | Dan Shaviro (NYU) | 121,838 | D. Dharmapala (Chicago) | 4,901 |
| 3 | Lily Batchelder (NYU) | 118,829 | Ruth Mason (Virginia) | 4,561 |
| 4 | Daniel Hemel (Chicago) | 117,744 | Lily Batchelder (NYU) | 3,825 |
| 5 | David Gamage (Indiana-Bloom.) | 117,709 | David Kamin (NYU) | 3,399 |
| 6 | Darien Shanske (UC-Davis) | 110,971 | Daniel Hemel (Chicago) | 3,395 |
| 7 | David Kamin (NYU) | 106,965 | Diane Ring (Boston College) | 3,335 |
| 8 | Cliff Fleming (BYU) | 105,449 | Bridget Crawford (Pace) | 3,312 |
| 9 | Manoj Viswanathan (Hastings) | 102,444 | Shu-Yi Oei (Boston College) | 3,213 |
| 10 | Rebecca Kysar (Fordham) | 101,351 | Hugh Ault (Boston College) | 2,849 |
| 11 | Ari Glogower (Ohio State) | 100,202 | Margaret Ryznar (Indiana-Indy) | 2,413 |
| 12 | Michael Simkovic (USC) | 44,965 | Richard Ainsworth (BU) | 2,392 |
| 13 | D. Dharmapala (Chicago) | 42,797 | David Gamage (Indiana-Bloom.) | 2,139 |
| 14 | Paul Caron (Pepperdine) | 37,639 | Dan Shaviro (NYU) | 2,139 |
| 15 | Louis Kaplow (Harvard) | 34,026 | Robert Sitkoff (Harvard) | 1,838 |
| 16 | Richard Ainsworth (BU) | 31,102 | Darien Shanske (UC-Davis) | 1,823 |
| 17 | Ed Kleinbard (USC) | 27,305 | Brad Borden (Brooklyn) | 1,699 |
| 18 | Vic Fleischer (UC-Irvine) | 26,517 | Louis Kaplow (Harvard) | 1,505 |
| 19 | Bridget Crawford (Pace) | 25,565 | Paul Caron (Pepperdine) | 1,459 |
| 20 | Jim Hines (Michigan) | 25,434 | Cliff Fleming (BYU) | 1,345 |
| 21 | Brad Borden (Brooklyn) | 25,400 | Katie Pratt (Loyola-L.A.) | 1,255 |
| 22 | Robert Sitkoff (Harvard) | 25,216 | Michael Simkovic (USC) | 1,250 |
| 23 | Ted Seto (Loyola-L.A.) | 24,667 | Ari Glogower (Ohio State) | 1,230 |
| 24 | Gladriel Shobe (BYU) | 24,248 | Yariv Brauner (Florida) | 1,158 |
| 25 | Katie Pratt (Loyola-L.A.) | 24,015 | Manoj Viswanathan (Hastings) | 1,097 |
December 16, 2020 in Legal Education, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Prof Rankings, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
Western State College Of Law Locks Down New Owner, Averting Closure
Following up on my previous posts (links below): Karen Sloan (Law.com), Western State College of Law Locks Down New Owner, Averting Closure:
Back in the spring of 2019, it looked like Western State College of Law was toast.
The owner of the Orange County, California, law school—Argosy University—was placed under a federal receivership and the campus lost its eligibility for federal student loans. Western State looked to be on the path to closure, joining six other law schools that had shuttered since 2017.
But nearly two years later, Western State is still operating and is celebrating a milestone: the completion of its acquisition by Westcliff University. The for-profit Westcliff, based in Irvine, threw the battered law school a lifeline in May 2019 when it agreed to purchase Western State for $1. A federal judge overseeing the receivership signed off on the deal, but the transfer still required the blessing of accreditors. The American Bar Association’s Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar approved the school’s transfer to Westcliff University in November 2019.
Now, the future of Western State—now called Western State College of Law at Westcliff University—appears secure with the completion of that transfer. ...
The now-averted closure of Western State would have been yet another blow for Southern California’s legal education market. Whittier Law School closed in July, while both the University of LaVerne College of Law and Thomas Jefferson School of Law opted to drop their ABA accreditation and instead become California-accredited schools. That conversion means that graduates can only sit for the bar exam in California.
December 16, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Crawford & Gerzog: Tax Benefits, Higher Education, And Race
Bridget J. Crawford (Pace) & Wendy C. Gerzog (Baltimore), Tax Benefits, Higher Education and Race: A Gift Tax Proposal for Direct Tuition Payments:
A tax system should be fair. According to conventional wisdom, this fairness mandate means that similarly situated taxpayers should pay similar taxes. Notably absent from most discussions about tax fairness is any consideration of race. This makes sense, if one focuses on the tax laws’ facial neutrality, as well as the Internal Revenue Service’s failure to collect official data about the race of taxpayers. But if one is interested in the “fairness,” as the word is commonly understood, of the tax law in action, then race and other identity characteristics must inform any analysis. This Article intervenes in the discussion of tax fairness with three principal claims: one descriptive, one normative, and one utilitarian.
December 16, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
Where Academic Freedom Ends
Chronicle of Higher Education op-ed: Where Academic Freedom Ends, by Julie A. Reuben (Harvard):
In 1915, when the American Association of University Professors issued its seminal “Declaration of Principles on Academic Freedom and Academic Tenure,” it identified three areas in which faculty members should enjoy the protection of academic freedom: their scholarship, their teaching, and their actions as citizens. In the century since, almost all analyses of academic freedom have focused on the last category — what the report called “extramural utterances.” We have heard a lot about our rights and responsibilities as citizens, and almost nothing about our rights and responsibilities as experts.
That balance should be reversed. We have fought hard for our speech rights as citizens, but we have assumed, thoughtlessly, that those rights apply when we speak as professionals. We are left without an articulated ethical guide for our actions — and that leaves us vulnerable to academics exploiting their credentials under the guise of academic freedom.
The authors of the 1915 report acknowledged limitations on professors’ freedom in all three areas, which they implicitly viewed as a hierarchy, with research deserving the greatest protection and speech on public matters requiring the greatest care. Since intellectual progress requires open inquiry, they thought faculty members’ research should be unfettered by social convention and received opinion, so long as it conforms to the best methods of scholarship. Teaching should be largely free, although professors had to teach all sides of disputed issues fairly, and sometimes censor themselves in deference to students’ immaturity. Faculty members should have the freedom to engage in public affairs as citizens, but they needed to clearly disassociate their personal views from those of the university where they taught, and to speak in a manner consistent with the character of their profession. ...
Academic freedom should ensure that faculty members can conduct their research free from restrictions and influences that might limit the questions they ask and distort their findings. But this does not mean that academics are free to say anything they please in professional contexts. ...
December 16, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (3)
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Wiseman: Taxing Local Energy Externalities
Hannah Jacobs Wiseman (Penn State), Taxing Local Energy Externalities, 96 Notre Dame L. Rev. 563 (2020):
There is a fundamental problem of scale in the governance of industrial development. For some of the fastest-growing U.S. industries, the negative impacts of development fall primarily at the local level, and the benefits tend to accrue more broadly to states and the federal government. These governments accordingly have inadequate incentives to address the very localized negative externalities of development. Yet states also increasingly preempt most local control over some forms of development. This creates a regulatory void, in which state and federal regulations are inadequate, and local governments lack the power to use traditional Pigouvian tools such as regulation, taxation, and liability to address local harms. Without these Pigouvian sticks, local governments are also constrained in their use of Coasean bargaining, in which they could threaten regulation or taxation to bring industry to the table and negotiate for private solutions. This gap is particularly evident in the energy space, in which oil and gas and associated pipelines, wind energy, and solar energy have strong local effects, but local control is constrained to varying degrees.
December 15, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
Abramowicz & Blair-Stanek: Contractual Tax Reform
Michael Abramowicz (George Washington) & Andrew Blair-Stanek (Maryland), Contractual Tax Reform, 61 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1537 (2020):
One-size-fits-all taxation fails to accommodate diverse taxpayer circumstances. This Article proposes allowing taxpayers to contract into alternative tax regimes administered by private intermediaries. Participating taxpayers would make payments to the intermediaries pursuant to contract, and the intermediaries would be required to pay to the government at least as much as these taxpayers would have paid the government otherwise. That amount is determined based on the actual tax receipts of a control group, taxpayers who wish to contract with an intermediary but instead are chosen at random to continue under the status quo. These alternative tax regimes might better accommodate taxpayers’ preferences, leaving the taxpayers with greater utility, without reducing government revenue.
December 15, 2020 in Scholarship, Tax, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)
Ex-Partner's Bias Suit Alleges He Was Told Black Lawyers Left Because They Can't Handle BigLaw
ABA Journal, Ex-partner's Bias Suit Alleges He Was Told Black Lawyers Left Because They Can't Handle BigLaw:
A former Black partner at K&L Gates alleges in a lawsuit that he was terminated for his complaints about discrimination and then harassed by private investigators hired by the law firm.
Willie Dennis is representing himself in the lawsuit, filed Monday in Manhattan federal court. His suit says he was “the victim of systemic racism and discriminatory barriers to equal treatment” at the law firm.
December 15, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (3)
How Law Schools Can Counteract Racial Bias Of LSAT Scores In The Admissions Process
LaTasha Hill, Less Talk, More Action: How Law Schools Can Counteract Racial Bias of LSAT Scores in the Admissions Process, 19 U. Md. L.J. Race, Religion, Gender & Class 313 (2019):
Racial bias exists within the Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) and can be viewed through racial and ethnic score gaps. The racial score gap was initially discovered five decades ago and continues to be true today. White test-takers consistently and overwhelmingly score higher than minority test-takers. This article is a call to action for the law school community to officially acknowledge the racial bias of the LSAT — a standardized test for law school acceptance — against minority applicants. This article encourages law school admission committees to deemphasize reliance on LSAT scores and develop new methods to justly assess the skills of every law school applicant. Consequently, by decreasing the weight of LSAT scores in the admissions process, entities such as U.S. News and World Report will need to restructure their methodology for ranking best law schools. By making procedural adjustments, law schools can bring equity to the admissions process, which would lead to a more diverse legal profession.
December 15, 2020 in Legal Ed Scholarship, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Conservative Miami Law Prof Fights The Campus Cancel Culture
Following up on my previous posts (links below): Miami Herald op-ed: As a Conservative UM Professor, I’m Fighting the Campus Cancel Culture, by Daniel B. Ravicher (Miami):
I’m a rare breed, a law professor that is an unashamed conservative. Over my 15 years of teaching, countless students of all genders, races, and religions, have confided in me as one of — if not the — only faculty member at the with whom they could speak freely about political and social issues.
This is because too many professors are intolerant of conservative ideas and students are rightfully afraid of being punished.
My conservative students feel pressure to adopt their professors’ left-wing political views by answering in class and on exams that criminal laws are racist, limits on immigration are dehumanizing and defending the unborn is violence to women. These students mock the intolerant left sermonizing from behind podiums, but also lament not being able to express their conservative views without fear of reprisal.
December 15, 2020 in Legal Ed News, Legal Education | Permalink | Comments (1)
Call For Tax Papers And Panels: Law & Society Annual Meeting On Crisis, Healing, Re-Imagining
Neil Buchanan (Florida) has issued his annual call for tax papers and panels for next year's annual meeting of the Law & Society Association in Chicago (May 27 - 30, 2020):
For the seventeenth year in a row, I will organize sessions for the "Law, Society, and Taxation" group (Collaborative Research Network 31). For the fifth year in a row, I am pleased to be carried along in these organizational efforts by Professors Jennifer Bird-Pollan and Mirit Eyal-Cohen.
The conference will mostly be held online, but LSA does hope to hold some events in person in Chicago for those who are willing and able to travel. They are also indicating that they will take account of time zone differences in their scheduling. ...
Although there is an official call for papers, please remember that you are not bound by the official theme of the conference ("Crisis, Healing, Re-Imagining"). We will give full consideration to proposals in any area of tax law, tax policy, distributive justice, interdisciplinary scholarship, and so on.
The deadline for submissions is 11:59 p.m. ET (USA) on Thursday, January 7, 2021.
Please be aware that the online submission system has been changed significantly since last year. (For what it's worth, I think the changes are all for the better.) Please follow these instructions carefully:
December 15, 2020 in Conferences, Legal Education, Scholarship, Tax, Tax Conferences, Tax Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)




