Arthur Cockfield
Arthur Cockfield is a member of the Faculty of Law at Queen's University and an expert on international taxation. He was a Fulbright Visiting Chair in Policy Studies at the University of Texas at Austin in winter 2013. He is a member of Corporate Taxation Reform Expert Panel at the Mowat Centre at the University of Toronto. He is a Research fellow in taxation law, at Monash University (Australia). In 2014 he published a paper with Allison Christians on the FATCA agreement between Canada and the United States. He is known for his textbooks on taxation law that are laden with dramatic plot devices like sex scandals and murder mysteries, which he adds to make their subject more entertaining to students.[1] He has written on tax havens. His article written with Cathy Brown of the University of Calgary abput retroactive taxation was awarded a foundation prize.[2]
Education[edit]
- B.A. at University of Western Ontario
- LL.B. at Queen's University
- J.S.M./J.S.D at Stanford
Editorial Boards[edit]
- Canadian Tax Journal
- International Journal of Business Law
- United Nations Educational
- Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) International Editorial Council[3]
References[edit]
- ↑ Stocks, John (2010-08-18). "Professor's titillating text makes learning law less taxing". The Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
- ↑ https://law.queensu.ca/news/queens-law-prof-shares-major-tax-writing-prize
- ↑ http://www.journalofbusinesslaw.com/arthur-cockfield.html
External links[edit]
- http://law.queensu.ca/faculty-research/faculty-directory/cockfield
- http://www.journalofbusinesslaw.com/arthur-cockfield.html
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