- What distinguishes a “tax’ from other governmental charges?
- What are direct and indirect taxes and why does it matter whether a tax is one or the other?
- What’s the significance of the Sixteenth Amendment, which permits Congress to enact a “tax on incomes” without having to meet the apportionment rule that otherwise applies to direct taxes?
- Does the taxing power legitimate any exercise of congressional power that is funded by taxation?
Title:
Taxes And The Constitution
When/Where:
March 13, 2013
8:30 - 9:30 AM
The City Club of Cleveland
850 Euclid Ave., 2nd floor
Cleveland, OH
Speaker:
Erik Jensen is the Schott-van den Eynden Professor of Law at Case Western Reserve University School of Law, having earlier occupied the David L. Brennan chair. He has been on the Case Western Reserve University School of Law faculty since 1983, teaching courses in federal income taxation, corporate and partnership taxation, business planning, and American Indian law. He has been a visiting professor at the Cornell University Law School.
Professor Jensen has published widely, in generalist journals including the Columbia Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, the Cornell Law Review, and the North Carolina Law Review, and in specialist journals including Tax Notes, the Virginia Tax Review, and Constitutional Commentary. He is author of The Taxing Power: A Reference Guide to the United States Constitution (Reference Guides to the United States Constitution)
By:
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Credit:
1 hr. of CLE credit available
More:
http://law.case.edu/Lectures.aspx?lec_id=328
No comments:
Post a Comment