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Epilogue: Establishing the foundations of tax law in UK universities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2009

Judith Freedman
Affiliation:
KPMG Professor of Taxation Law, Oxford University, UK
John Avery Jones
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
Peter Harris
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
David Oliver
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

If G. S. A. Wheatcroft initiated the academic teaching of tax law in UK universities, then John Tiley ensured its continuation. Professor Tiley has been the face of UK academic tax law for the past thirty years, both in domestic and international arenas. At home he has dealt with other law teachers who were dubious about the role of taxation in the curriculum, with the professions and with government. At an international level he has ably represented the UK in gatherings of tax teachers. It seems inconceivable that he will cease making a contribution to teaching and writing on his retirement, but this marks a suitable point at which to assess the position we have reached with tax teaching in the UK and to consider the future.

In his own fascinating survey of the development of UK tax law teaching, ‘50 years: Tax, Law and Academia’, written to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the British Tax Review, Tiley concluded the state of the tax academy is mixed and that, whilst –

there is every reason to think that tax can and will survive as an area of study in which both research and teaching of the highest quality can be carried on in our universities … its place can, at times, seem precarious.

It is hard to argue with his conclusion without seeming complacent (and complacency would certainly be misguided) but Tiley is over-modest in his article about his own contribution and about the progress he has fronted over the last two decades.

Type
Chapter
Information
Comparative Perspectives on Revenue Law
Essays in Honour of John Tiley
, pp. 288 - 295
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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