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Book cover for International Handbook on Clinical Tax Education
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

Copyright: © Authors 2023

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14296/grch4849

Number of pages: 318

Number of illustrations: 22

Publication date: December 2023

To request a review copy of this title, please email us: uolp.reviews@sas.ac.uk

International Handbook on Clinical Tax Education

Amy Lawton (Editor), Annette Morgan (Author), David Massey (Author), Donovan Castelyn (Author)

Open Access logo

Series: OBserving Law

Published in association with: Institute of Advanced Legal Studies

While tax clinics have existed in the US since the 1970s, they are now being established throughout the world, with recent clinical developments in Australia, the UK and Ireland in particular.

Of interest to higher education professionals, the tax profession and policymakers, this practical handbook explores the benefits that a clinical tax education can have and equips readers with the tools needed to start a clinical tax project. It investigates the ways in which tax clinics can both educate and remedy tax positions for local communities. It also explores the higher education setting, in which community tax projects rely on students for their success, offering them the benefits of an alternative learning environment in tax and experience in tax while studying.

Beyond identifying the practical benefits, this handbook uses learning from tax clinics to uncover the burdens and impacts of tax policy on more marginalised taxpayers, and how policymakers can tailor tax systems to overcome them.

Foreword

Nina Olsen

1. Introduction

Amy Lawton, Annette Morgan, David Massey and Donovan Castelyn

Part 1: The Tax Clinic

2. A brief history of tax clinics around the globe

Donovan Castelyn and Annette Morgan

3. Project administration: how to set up a tax clinic

Amy Lawton

4. Rationale: Tax support for low-income individuals

Tina Riches

5. Rationale: Tax and the poverty interface

Ann Kayis-Kumar, Lily Pan, Michael Walpole, Bradley Hastings and Jack Noone

Part 2: Tax Clinics and our Communities

6. Engagement in the community

Amy Lawton, Annette Morgan, David Massey and Donovan Castelyn

7. Listening to our Communities: The Community Tax Law Project as an example of Low-Income Taxpayer Community Focused Service Provider

David Sams

8. Public Education: the Unilag Tax Club * Edidiong Bassey and Aduloju Oluwatofunmi*

9. Public Education: engaging with secondary education in schools

Michelle Lyon Drumbl

10. Taxpayer resolution: improving taxpayer compliance in Indonesia

Kristian Agung Prasetyo and Khusnaini

11. Policy changes: impact on and through the tax court

Keith Fogg

12. Marginalised voices: tax and the criminal justice system

Deborah Wood

Part 3: Tax Clinics and our Students

13. Pedagogical theory and clinical tax education

Amy Lawton

14. Enhancing student experience: shadowing, role plays and reflection

Connie Vitale and Andrew Medlen

15. Introducing tax advocacy to students

Sarah Lora and Christine Speidel

16. Developing Employability Skills through Practice-Based Learning

Eric O. Boahen, Shampa Roy-Mukherjee, Emmanuel Ambe and James Tuffour

17. Students’ professional identity and a fully online tax clinic

Brett Freudenberg, Melissa Belle Isle, Colin Perryman, Kristin Thomas and Ashleigh Cohen

Part 4: Moving Forwards

18. A research roadmap for tax clinics

Emer Mulligan and Margaret O’Neill

19. Moving forwards: tax clinics and business schools

David Massey

20. Concluding remarks

Amy Lawton

Copyright: 2023

DOI: 10.14296/grch4849

Number of pages: 318

Number of illustrations: 22

Publication date: December 2023

PDF ISBN: 9781911507369

Read Online ISBN: 9781911507529

Paperback ISBN: 9781911507352

Amy Lawton (Editor)

Amy Lawton is a Lecturer in Tax Law at Edinburgh Law School. Prior to joining the School in 2021, she was a Lecturer in Law at Lancaster University where she founded the first UK-based Tax Clinic. Her research interests broadly lie in tax and the environment. Her recent work has explored how university students engage with a clinical education in tax, value creation in the UK, and how environmental taxation can be used to drive behavioural change in businesses in relation to energy consumption.

Annette Morgan (Author)

David Massey (Author)

Donovan Castelyn (Author)

Subject: Law

BISAC codes: LAW059000, LAW062000

Thema codes: LNUP, LNUY

Keywords: advocacy, clinical legal education, legal aid, legal studies, pro bono representation, tax clinics, tax law, tax system, taxpayers

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