
Paul L. Caron
Dean
Pepperdine Caruso
School of Law

The winner of the International Fiscal Association’s 2025 International Tax Student Writing Competition is: Jacob Cohen (UVA / Skadden): Crystals and Mud in International Taxation: Why the Principal Purpose Test’s Impact Will Not Meet Expectations. Faculty Sponsor: Ruth Mason
Joshua Gans, an economist at the University of Toronto, published a recent Substack essay that might give pause to researchers and scholars in all fields: “Reflections on Vibe Researching: My year-long experiment in AI first research.” His opening: “Write me a paper that will get published in Econometrica.” I tried that prompt (and nothing more
Alex Zhang (Emory) argues that the government has used tax exemptions to exacerbate racial equality
Year end results for total 2025 downloads are here. Sort of our version of the NYTimes bestseller list. Those who appear are proud and excited. Those who do not point out that quantity and quality don’t always mesh. In any event, two scholars, Daniel Solove and Cass Sunstein clearly stand at the top of the
Suzanne Darrow-Kleinhaus, Touro, “Even If You’ve Adopted the Next Gen UBE, Your Work Isn’t Done Yet,” 40 Touro L. Rev. 889 (2025). Abstract The National Conference of Bar Examiners (“NCBE”) is set to administer the NextGen Uniform Bar Examination’s (“UBE”) first release in July 2026. The exam questions are well-structured, well written, and require examinees
Andrew Appleby (Tennessee) presents Constitutional Commandeering during the Section on State and Local Government Law’s main session, Crisis and Capacity: State and Local Government Law in a Time of Constraint, today at AALS: This Article traces the evolution of the anti-commandeering doctrine and its increasing relevance to federal limitations on state taxation, before exploring the role of
Following up on her widely-acclaimed monograph, The Code of Capital, Katharina Pistor, the Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law at Columbia Law School offers us this fall, The Law of Capitalism and How to Transform It. In an admirably concise effort, she tackles topics made central by the legal realists involving the role of
My Northeastern colleague, Professor of Law and Biology Jonathan Kahn has penned a fascinating exploration of how the concept of diversity (often racial diversity) has unwittingly contributed to the perpetuation of biological conceptions of race in a variety of settings: The Uses of Diversity (Columbia Univ. Press. 2025) His analysis is far more penetrating, but
University of Miami Professor of Law and Dean’s Distinguished Scholar, Kunal M. Parker has been awarded the John Phillip Reed Book Award by the American Society for Legal History, for his monograph The Turn to Process: American Legal, Political, and Economic Thought, 1870–1970 (Cambridge University Press, 2024). The full list of this year’s awards is here: https://aslh.net/aslh-book-prize-winners-2025/
Kevin L. Cope (Virginia), Jes Frankenreiter (Washington University in St. Louis), Scott Hirst (Boston University), Eric A. Posner (Chicago), Daniel Schwarcz (Minnesota), Dane Thorley (BYU), Grading Machines: Can AI Exam-Grading Replace Law Professors? Abstract In the past few years, large language models (LLMs) have achieved significant technical advances, such that legal-advocacy organizations are increasingly adopting
There is quite a bit of movement in this week’s list of new tax paper downloads on SSRN, with new papers debuting on the list at #4 and #5: Editor’s Note: If you would like to receive a daily email with links to tax posts on TaxProf Blog, email me here.
Bloomberg (Andrew Leahey): “A recent FOIAball investigation into UCLA’s football program offers more than a peek at college sports fundraising in the era of name, image, and likeness compensation—it may expose a test case in tax enforcement. Public records suggest that donors were routed through a 501(c)(3) charity to support NIL deals while claiming tax deductions.”
This magisterial history by University of Michigan Professor Michelle Adams, is due out in paperback in January 2026. The Containment tells the story of how the battle to desegregate the schools was effectively derailed via the Supreme Court’s decision in Milliken v. Bradley. Readers need look no further to discover why scholarship matters. https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374250423/thecontainment/
Amanda Parsons (Colorado) presents Taxing Social Data at Boston College today at 5pm ET as part of its Tax Policy Collaborative hosted by James Repetti and Diane Ring:
Jeesoo Nam (USC; Google Scholar) presents Desert-Based Taxation today at Pepperdine, as part of its Tax Policy Workshop Series:
On Friday, November 7, 2025, the Nootbaar Institute on Law, Religion, and Ethics at Pepperdine Caruso School of Law held an academic workshop titled “Christian Legal Thought from the Margins.” The workshop brought together legal scholars to share their current research projects from a diverse array of fields (including bankruptcy, tax, labor, criminal law, immigration,
Conor Clarke (Wash U) & Ari Glogower (Northwestern), Tariffs and the Taxing Power: Historical Lessons for Major Questions and Nondelegation, 103 Wash. U. L. Rev. __ (forthcoming 2026):
Alex Raskolnikov (Columbia), Taxes and Tournaments, 2024 Mich. St. L. Rev. 1123:
I am presenting “What Made Income Taxes Possible?” today at NYU’s Tax Policy and Public Finance Colloquium, hosted by Daniel Shaviro. The paper is coauthored with Ed Fox (Michigan Law) and Wojciech Kopczuk (Columbia Econ). Here is the abstract: Why do governments impose taxes on “income” rather than (and in addition to) other things? Large