a surfer in front of the malibu pier on a sunny day

Paul L. Caron
Dean
Pepperdine Caruso
School of Law

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  • Murphy: The Capital Gains Preference, Women, and Persons of Color

    Ann M. Murphy (Gonzaga), has published Nothing to Gain: The Disparate Impact of the Capital Gains Tax Preference on Women and Persons of Color, 26 Nev. L.J. 1 (2025). Here is the abstract:

    Tax preference provisions are scattered across the Internal Revenue Code, and the capital gains tax rate offers an enormous advantage for wealthy taxpayers. When first enacted, it was touted as eliminating the “lock-in effect” which caused investors to hold on to their investment property. Today, it is justified as encouraging investment and eliminating gains produced merely by the passage of time. The provision’s unequal benefits are hidden from the picture. Although not overtly discriminatory, the preference operates as a tax cut for the wealthy. Women and persons of color see little benefit from the lower tax rate. The difficulty of comparing tax data by gender, race, and ethnicity exacerbates this inequity. The exclusion of women and persons of color from the reduced tax rate contributes to the overall inequality of wealth, a situation that must be remedied. Historically, Congress has been reluctant to make meaningful adjustments to eliminate this built-in inequality, such as taxing unrealized gains or providing comparable benefits to women and persons of color. This Article provides a brief history of the capital gains preference, examines statistical income and wealth disparities based on gender and race, and proposes solutions to reduce the negative impact of the capital gains preference that leaves behind women and persons of color.

  • Browde: Prohibiting State Property Taxes in Indian Country

    Pippa Browde (Montana) has published “#Taxback? Prohibiting State Real Property Taxes on Land in Indian Country,” 108 Marq. L. Rev. 877 (2025). Here is the abstract:

    Land is a critical asset of Indian tribes. As tribes wrestle with how to create sustainable economies to support their sovereignty, the use and management of tribal land is integral. Taxation is a key component of economic development. This Article is about taxation of land within Indian country. It considers existing law that allows for state taxation of some land within Indian country. It makes a normative claim as to who the proper taxing sovereign should be based on tax policy principles and principles that support tribal self-governance and tribal sovereignty.

    In Part II, this Article provides the background for the analysis. It starts with explaining ad valorem property taxes, describing the key features and highlighting the importance such taxes serve in funding sub-federal level governments. Next, the Article provides the history of the relationships between Tribal Nations and the federal and state governments, specifically on Allotment and the legacy of Allotment policies that shaped the law limiting a tribal government’s ability to tax and expanding a state government’s ability to tax real property in Indian country. Part III of this Article analyzes the legal and policy arguments that could be made to dismantle the expansion of state power to tax real property owned by tribes and/or their members in Indian country. The analysis critiques the jurisprudence expanding state taxation of real property in Indian country and analyzes the negative impact on tribal sovereignty. It sets forth the alternative to expanding state power based on both territorial jurisdiction and tax policy principles. Part IV concludes.

  • Avi-Yonah et al: Taxation of Autonomous Artificial Intelligence

    Reuven Avi-Yonah, Lucas Brasil Salama, Herbert Snitz, and W. Robert Thomas have published “Taxation of Autonomous Artificial Intelligence” (the Boden Lecture) in the Marquette Law Review. Here is the abstract:

    This Article proposes that tax can be a useful supplement to other measures to regulate Autonomous Artificial Intelligence (AAI) and limit its potential harmful effects. This proposal differs from command-and-control regulation of AAI along the lines of European Union legislation that may unduly limit the development of AAI. It also differs from existing proposals to tax AAI to generate revenue to help workers displaced by AAI programs, or to tax the data used by AAI. The proposal is based on granting AAI programs like ChatGPT separate legal personhood, like corporate personhood, while incentivizing or requiring their corporate owner to place them in a separate corporate shell. The tax rate on AAI’s income is adjusted based on harmfulness indices based on an objective assessment, thereby creating an incentive for its corporate owner to reduce the harm. Developing a new tax on AAI excludes it from the limits imposed by the existing international tax regime on taxing multinationals, which are inappropriate for a tax on a person that does not have a physical location except on servers that can be located anywhere.

  • March Madness Final Four All Have Stellar Law Schools

    I hope that I am not taking the AALS TaxProf Blog down a dangerous (or meaningless?) path. But everyone is talking about the Final Four of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, which was finalized yesterday. The final four — Michigan, University of Connecticut, Arizona, and Illinois. All are great public universities with great law schools! An interesting development indeed.

    Everyone and anyone has a pick to win it all. The betting money, I am told, is on Michigan. But anything can happen. Just ask Duke, which got edged out yesterday by UConn on a buzzer beater after blowing a big lead.

    It is March Madness!

  • Southwestern Mourns Professor Isabelle R. Gunning, Civil Rights Leader, Legal Scholar, and Teacher

    Professor Isabelle R. Gunning passed away in the early hours of March 28, 2026, in Los Angeles. 

    Professor Gunning was a beloved member of the Southwestern Law School community for more than three decades. She joined the faculty in 1992 and served with distinction as the inaugural Mayor Tom Bradley Professor of Law and the inaugural Director of the Critical Race, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Concentration. Across generations of students, she was admired for the seriousness of her intellect, the moral clarity she brought to difficult questions, and the depth of care with which she taught, mentored, and challenged those around her.  More information about Professor Gunning can be found here.

  • State QSBS Conformity

    State conformity to the federal tax code is a messy and constantly evolving process. The conformity stakes are raised exponentially when Congress enacts substantial tax preferences, as it did in 2017 with the TCJA and again last year with the OBBBA. Despite the Treasury Secretary’s reproach, almost all states will decouple from certain federal tax provisions to some degree, especially as to OBBBA provisions that are both novel and risk substantial revenue losses for states.

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  • Charleston School of Law Names Jonathan Marcantel Dean

    Marcantel will become the fourth Dean in Charleston Law history. Marcantel joined the Charleston School of Law faculty in August 2011 and has served as Interim Dean and Professor of Law since November 2024. 

    Prior to joining the faculty, Marcantel served as the Associate Dean of Assessment at the Lincoln Memorial University-Duncan School of Law. Dean Marcantel graduated from the College of Charleston, cum laude, with B.A. in political science and history. Thereafter, he earned his Juris Doctor from the University of South Carolina School of Law. 

  • Washington State’s Odd Place in the Millionaire’s Tax Debate

    Billy Hamilton (Tax Notes): Washington State’s Odd Place in the Millionaire’s Tax Debate

    Flying in the face of this long history of failure, the Democrat-controlled Legislature is taking another swing at the elusive income tax this year, but they’re proposing not a general income tax, but one that targets the state’s richest taxpayers: a millionaire’s tax.

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  • Hayashi Presents “Inequality among whom?: Tax Federalism and the Choice of Distributional Units” Today at San Diego

    Andrew Hayashi (Virginia, SSRN), presents Inequality among whom?: Tax Federalism and the Choice of Distributional Units at San Diego today as part of its Tax Law Speaker Series.

    Monday, March 30, 2026 | noon – 1:00 p.m. PST
    Warren Hall 2A, University of San Diego
    students welcome / lunch provided / registration not required

    (more…)

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