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New 2012 U.S. News Tax Rankings

U.S. News LogoHere are the new 2012 U.S. News Tax Rankings, along with last year’s rankings. The big changes from 2011 are (1) Florida moving ahead of Georgetown at #2, and (2) the number of schools without tax LL.M. programs moving up in the rankings (10) and the number of schools with tax LL.M. programs moving down (6):

2012

Rank

 Tax

Program

2011

Rank

1

NYU

1

2

Florida

3

3

Georgetown

2

4

Northwestern

4

5

Miami

5

6

Harvard

8

7

UCLA

11

8

Virginia

10

9

Boston University

6

10

Columbia

14

10

Loyola-L.A.

9

10

Stanford

13

10

Texas

18

14

Michigan

16

14

USC

16

16

Boston College

18

16

Pennsylvania

n/r

16

San Diego

6

16

Villanova

21

20

U. Washington

n/r

21

Chapman

n/r

22

Chicago

21

22

UC-Hastings

18

n/r

Denver

12

n/r

SMU

14

Here are the rankings of the graduate tax programs, along with last year’s rankings:

2012

Rank

Grad Tax

Program

2011

Rank

1

NYU

1

2

Florida

3

3

Georgetown

2

4

Northwestern

4

5

Miami

5

6

Boston University

6

7

Loyola-L.A.

8

8

San Diego

6

8

Villanova

11

10

U. Washington

n/r

11

Chapman

n/r

n/r

Denver

9

n/r

SMU

10

The U.S. News tax survey instrument states that it is intended “to identify the law schools having the top programs in tax law.” The survey is sent “to a sample of law school faculty listed in the AALS Directory of Law Teachers 2009-2010 as currently teaching a course or seminar in tax law.” Recipients are asked “to [i]dentify up to fifteen (15) schools that have the highest-quality tax law courses or programs. In making your choices consider all elements that contribute to a program’s excellence, for example, the depth and breadth of the program, faculty research and publication record, etc.”

As Donald Tobin (Ohio State) has noted, it is more than strange that NYU has finished ahead of Florida and Georgetown each year that U.S. News has conducted the survey.  Because the survey ranks the schools by how often they appear on the respondents’ “Top 15” lists, this means that some folks list NYU, but not Florida and Georgetown, among the Top 15 tax programs.

For more on tax rankings, see our article, Pursuing a Tax LLM Degree: Where?, which compiles information about 13 highly ranked tax LLM programs: (1) NYU; (2) Florida; (3) Georgetown; (4) Northwestern; (5) Miami; (6) Boston University; (7) San Diego; (8) Loyola-L.A./LMU; (9) SMU; (10) Denver; (11) University of Washington; (12) Villanova; and (13) Chapman. The topics on which information is reported in the Article include: (1) tuition; (2) scholarships; (3) the full-time tax professors who teach in each program and the tax courses they teach; (4) the number of full-time and part-time students enrolled in each program; (5) general information about adjunct professors teaching in each program; (6) required courses; (7) elective courses, specialty certificates, and concentrations; (8) opportunities to develop tax practice skills by taking experiential learning courses and simulated practice courses; (9) extracurricular tax activities; (10) opportunities to graduate with honors or receive academic prizes; and (11) career planning and placement services offered to students in each program. The article also ranks the tax faculty at these thirteen law schools by citations (the Top 5 are NYU (1), Florida (2), Georgetown (3), Miami (4), and Northwestern (5)) and SSRN downloads (the Top 5 are Loyola-L.A. (1), NYU (2), Chapman (3), Florida (4), and San Diego (5)).

Other resources available on TaxProf Blog include:


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