[We share the following announcement.]
In the fall of 2018, the Boston College Law School Legal
History Roundtable started its 17th successful year. The Roundtable draws on
Boston College Law School’s and Boston College’s strength and interest in legal
history. It offers an opportunity for Boston College faculty and faculty from
other area institutions, students, and members of the Boston College community
to meet and discuss a pre-circulated paper in legal history. Meeting several
times each semester, the Roundtable seeks to promote an informal, collegial
atmosphere of informed discussion.
For the 2018-2019 academic year, Professor Mary Sarah
Bilder, Professor Daniel R. Coquillette, Professor Frank Herrmann and Professor
Daniel Farbman are conveners.
The Roundtable usually meets several times during the
semester in the afternoon at 4:30 pm in the Library Conference Room of the
Boston College Law School Library. Refreshments are available beginning at 4:15
pm.*
In 2018-2019, our first Roundtable will be jointly sponsored
with the BC Law School Tax Policy Workshop and therefore meet at noon.
Papers will be available when appropriate before each
presentation.
For more information, please contact:
Joan Manna (617) 552-4344
For assistance with parking passes for non-BC faculty,
please also contact Joan.
THIS YEAR'S SCHEDULE after the jump.
Fall 2018
Thursday, September 13 (12:15 pm)
Ajay K. Mehrota, Professor of Law and Executive Director,
American Bar Foundation and Northwestern University Law School
Ajay K. Mehrotra is the Executive Director and a Research
Professor at the American Bar Foundation (ABF) and Professor of Law at the
Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, and an Affiliated Professor of
History at Northwestern University. He is the author of Making the Modern
American Fiscal State: Law, Politics and the Rise of Progressive Taxation,
1877-1929 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013), which received the 2014
best book award from the U.S. Society for Intellectual History. He is the
co-editor (with Isaac William Martin and Monica Prasad) of The New Fiscal
Sociology: Taxation in Comparative and Historical Perspective (New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2009). His writings have also appeared in
student-edited law reviews and interdisciplinary journals including Law &
Social Inquiry, Law & History Review, and Law & Society Review.
Mehrotra received his B.A. in Economics from the University of Michigan, his
J.D. from Georgetown, and his Ph.D. in American History from the University of
Chicago.
"The VAT Laggard: A Comparative History of U.S.
Resistance to the Value-added Tax"
When one examines how modern nation-states generate public
revenue, the United States quickly emerges as a striking outlier compared to
other advanced industrialized countries. Even a cursory review of
statistics from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) shows that the United States is out of step with the rest of the
developed world in the amount, and the way, it raises tax revenue. One
reason for this apparent American tax exceptionalism is the absence of a U.S.
national consumption tax. Whereas nearly all other OECD countries have a
national consumption tax, frequently in the form of a value-added tax (VAT),
the United States remains one of the few countries without a consumption tax at
the federal level.
This project explores how and why the United States has
historically rejected national consumption taxes. Nearly all developed
countries, and many in the developing world, have some type of a national
consumption tax, frequently in the form of a value-added tax (VAT). The
United States is an exception. This project focuses on the fundamental
question: why no VAT in the United States? To address this overall
research question, this project explores three key historical periods. The
first is the 1920s, when tax theorists in the United States and Germany first
began to formulate and propose crude forms of value-added taxes. The second
critical period is the decades of the mid-twentieth century. During the 1940s,
the United States once again seriously considered but rejected national
consumption taxes aimed at raising revenue for World War II. Similarly, after
the war, during the U.S. occupation of Japan, American economic experts
designed and implemented a proto-VAT for Japan. The third crucial period is the
1970s and ‘80s. During these decades, American lawmakers considered and even
supported a U.S. VAT, but eventually withdrew their support or were ousted from
political office. At the same time, other developed countries, such as Japan,
Australia, and Canada, began to move towards a national VAT. By focusing on
these three key historical periods from a comparative perspective, this project
seeks to study how and why the U.S. has failed to adopt national consumption
taxes, such as the VAT.
Tuesday, October 2 (4:30 pm)
Mitra Sharafi, Professor of Law, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Mitra Sharafi is Professor of Law and Legal Studies at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison, with History affiliation. She is the author of
Law and Identity in Colonial South Asia: Parsi Legal Culture, 1772-1947
(Cambridge University Press), which won the Law and Society Association’s Hurst
Prize in 2015. She is currently working on her second book project, “Fear of
the False: Forensic Science in Colonial India” as a Davis Center fellow at
Princeton’s History department (fall 2018) and an ACLS Burkhardt fellow ’18
(National Humanities Center, 2020-1).
"South Asians at the Inns of Court: Empire and
Expulsion circa 1900"
This paper explores the disbarment proceedings of South
Asian members of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, one of the four
Inns of Court for barristers in London, circa 1900. Law students from across
the British Empire attended the Inns by the late nineteenth century, and the
two disciplinary cases of A.K. Ghose and S. Krishnavarma shed light on the
imperial legal profession’s views of racial and cultural difference; deception,
education, and “good character”; and loyalty to British rule.