September 2019 Tax Law Top Blawgs
Covers recent developments affecting business law. From the University of Illinois College of Law.
Covers federal, state and international tax issues, including AMT, capital gains and dividends taxes, corporate income taxes, income taxes, property taxes, and sales and use taxes. By the Tax Foundation.
Covers corporate, non-profit, estates, individual or international taxes. By Kelly Erb.
Edited by University of Miami School of Law Professor Michael Froomkin, The Journal of Things We Like (Lots)–JOTWELL–invites law professors to join us in filling a telling gap in legal scholarship by creating a space where legal academics will go to identify, celebrate, and discuss the best new legal scholarship.
Focuses on complliance, corporate governance, disclosure, mergers and tax issues. By Sheppard Mullin.
Covers estate tax reform. By Hani Sarji.
Covers IRS tax problems. By Richard Close.
Covers estate taxes, payroll taxes, sales taxes, tax evasion and tax fraud. By Russ Fox.
Covers the law of tax exempt entities. By Jedediah Bodger.
Covers topics such as sales and payroll tax problems, offers in compromise, tax audits, tax debt, tax disputes, tax fraud, tax litigation and tax controversy, and tax preparer penalties. By Brager Tax Law Group.
Insight into the trials and tribulations of a UK tax lawyer. By Ann L. Humphrey.
Tax law and economics by Linda Beale
Covers tax law. By an NYU LL.M. student.
Covers topics related to business law, including intellectual property, trademarks, litigation, and employment law.
Tax and budget policy by Dan Shaviro
Covers South Florida estate planning, probate and tax law issues. By Ginsberg Shulman, PL.
Post and riposte from a resolutely cranky but creative law professor, emphasizing international and comparative tax law... by Michael Livingston
Covers forensic accounting, estate administration, and personal, corporate, and estate income taxes.
Covers US tax laws for American expatriates living and working overseas, US-dual (or multi-)national families, green card holders, those wishing to expatriate, foreign investors into the US market or other foreign persons having any US connections.
Covers tax controversies involving the IRS and California Franchise Tax Board, as well as California probate, estate planning matters and business transactions. By Mitchell A. Port.