Ad: BlueJ Better Tax Answers. -Accomplish hours of research in seconds -Instantly draft high-quality communications -Verify answers using a library of trusted tax content. Learn more

SSRN Tax Professor Rankings

SSRN


SSRN has updated its monthly rankings of 616 American and international law school faculties and 1,500 law professors by (among other things) the number of paper downloads from the SSRN data base.  Here is the new list (through October 18, 2009) 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 Downloads


 


Recent Downloads


1


Louis Kaplow (Harvard)


14,041


Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan)


3955


2


Vic Fleischer (Colorado)


12,634


Dennis Ventry (UC-Davis)


3135


3


Reuven Avi-Yonah (Michigan)


12,623


James Hines (Michigan)


2348


4


James Hines (Michigan)


11,626


Bradley Borden (Washburn)


1921


5


Chris Sanchirico (Penn)


8826


Wendy Gerzog (Baltimore)


1884


6


Dennis Ventry (UC-Davis)


8286


Vic Fleischer (Colorado)


1692


7


David Walker (BU)


8206


Louis Kaplow (Harvard)


1681


8


David Weisbach (Chicago)


8030


Richard Kaplan (Illinois)


1630


9


Ed McCaffery (USC)


8005


David Weisbach (Chicago)


1606


10


Paul Caron (Cincinnati)


7709


Ruth Mason (Connecticut)


1575


11


Robert Sitkoff (Harvard)


7237


David Walker (BU)


1540


12


Ted Seto (Loyola-L.A.)


 7034


Bridget Crawford (Pace)


1527


13


Richard Kaplan (Illinois)


6715


Francine Lipman (Chapman)


1472


14


Steven Bank (UCLA)


6186


Carter Bishop (Suffolk)


1393


15


David Schizer (Columbia)


5709


Erik Jensen (Case Western)


1374


16


Francine Lipman (Chapman)


5588


Karen Burke (San Diego)


1354


17


Bradley Borden (Washburn)


5541


Michael Knoll (Penn)


1254


18


Michael Knoll (Penn)


5273


Ed McCaffery (USC)


1240


19


Daniel Shaviro (NYU)


4985


Tom Brennan (Northwestern)


1156


20


Wendy Gerzog (Baltimore)


4958


Allison Christians (Wisconsin)


1134


21


Terrence Chorvat (G. Mason)


4508


Paul Caron (Cincinnati)


1110


22


Bridget Crawford (Pace)


4304


Brian Galle (Florida State)


1064


23


Leandra Lederman (Indiana)


4103


Steven Bank (UCLA)


1062


24


Ruth Mason (Connecticut)


4089


Lily Batchelder (NYU)


1056


25


Erik Jensen (Case Western)


3942


Chris Sanchirico (Penn)


1012


Note that this ranking includes full-time tax professors with at least one tax paper on SSRN, and all papers (including non-tax papers) by these tax professors are included in the SSRN data.


The other SSRN ranking categories are:



These rankings, of course, are imperfect measures of faculty scholarly performance — as are the existing ranking methodologies of reputation surveys, productivity counts, and citation counts. Our modest claim in our article, Ranking Law Schools: Using SSRN to Measure Scholarly Performance, 81 Ind. L.J. 83 (2006) (Symposium on The Next Generation of Law School Rankings), is that the SSRN data can play a role in faculty rankings along with these other measures.  Bill Henderson (Indiana) thinks we are too modest, and that SSRN may provide a better measure of faculty performance than these other methodologies.


For my recent articles on what SSRN downloads can tell us about the current state and future of legal scholarship, and about the relationship between scholarship and blogging, see:

For Ted Seto’s faculty-wide (and metropolitan area-wide) analysis of these SSRN tax rankings, see:


About the Author

Ad: BlueJ Better Tax Answers. Blue J's generative AI tax research solution is transforming how tax experts work. Learn more.
Ad: TaxAnalysis Award of Distinction. Honoring those that have made outstanding contributions to the field of taxation.
Information and rates on advertising on TaxProf Blog

Discover more from TaxProf Blog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading