Pittsburgh Tax Review Publishes Volume 21 (Issue 1)
The Pittsburgh Tax Review published Issue 1, Volume 21 yesterday. This is a symposium issue comprising essays from participants in a terrific symposium organized by Alice the Incomparable. She probably doesn’t like being called that, but tough luck. She’s a victim of her own incomparably hard work. Too bad Alice, get over it! The issue includes more than a few essays about exempt organizations. Here are the PTR essays from “The Federal Income Tax: Racially Blind but Not Racially Neutral:”
Alice Abreu, Illusion of Neutrality: There’s More Than Math and Money in Tax
Leo P. Martinez, You’ve Got to Speak Out Against the Madness: The Myth of Tax Neutrality
Alice Martin Thomas, The HBCU Tax Pipeline Creating Charles Hamilton Houston Social Justice Tax Warriors: How to Build, Maintain, and Sustain an HBCU Tax Pipeline
Richard Winchester, A Simple Tax Case Complicated by Race
David A. Brennen, Race Conscious Affirmative Action by Tax Exempt 501(c)(3) Institutions After Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard and UNC
Samuel D. Brunson, Black Charity: Rethinking the Subsidy of Black Charitable Donations
Darryll K. Jones, Who Has Standing to Challenge Tax Exemption for Hate Groups?
Victoria Haneman, 529 Plans and School Choice
Tracy A. Kane and Andrew J. Greenlee, Opportunity Zones and Race
Nicholas A. Mirkay and Palma Joy Strand, Economic Dignity Creates a Pro-Tax Story for Racial Equity
Phyllis C. Taite, Taxing Wealth: Strategic Methods to Address Growing Inequalities
Francine J. Lipman, Is Now A(nother) Teachable Moment? Honoring the Legacy of Dr. William E. Spriggs
Bridget J. Crawford, A Tax National Anthem
darryll k. jones