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Getting a Poor Return: Courts, Justice, and Taxes

SUNY Press

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» About this Book
    GETTING A POOR RETURN
    CONTENTS
    LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
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1. TAX POLICY AND THE PURSUIT OF JUSTICE
 
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2. COURTS AND THE IRS
 
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3. TAX LITIGATION AND TAX FORUM CHOICE
 
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4. TAX DECISION MAKING
 
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5. INFLUENCES ON THE IRS AND THE AUDITS OF LOW-INCOME TAXPAYERS
 
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6. COURTS, FAIRNESS AND THECREATION AND ENFORCEMENT OF NATIONAL TAX POLICY
 
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APPENDIX: METHODOLOGY AND THEUSE OF PANEL DATA
    CASES CITED
    NOTES
    REFERENCES
 
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INDEX
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 Getting a Poor Return: Courts, Justice, and Taxes
by Robert M. Howard
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Bibliographic information

TitleGetting a Poor Return: Courts, Justice, and Taxes
AuthorRobert M. Howard
PublisherSUNY Press
Publication Date10/20/09
SubjectPolitical Science, Public Policy
Pages147


Description 

Examines competing claims and beliefs about the American legal system in the area of tax policy and tax enforcement.

Public policy often favors one group over another. In the case of tax policy, the conventional wisdom has been that the dominant political coalition will offer policies that favor their primary constituents. The longstanding belief has been that the disfavored group may always assert their rights in court, the expectation being, as Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote, that "all citizens are equal before the law." In this revealing and insightful study, Robert M. Howard demonstrates that long-cherished beliefs such as equality before the law are more wishful thinking than reality. Courts, he argues, differ little from national policy makers in their approach to tax policy and tax enforcement. Examining the tax litigation process, particularly the influence and impact of competing courts, Howard discovers that fairness before the law may be a laudable goal, but the appointment process ensures that tax policy and tax enforcement rulings by the courts reflect the perspectives of the dominant political coalition.



About the Author 

Robert M. Howard ---

Robert M. Howard is Associate Professor of Political Science at Georgia State University.




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