Sunday, February 25, 2007

Blogs

I am pleased to announce that our Law School website now has a list of all our faculty blogs. The URL is: http://www.law.wayne.edu/faculty/blogs_faculty.html.

The blogs include the following. The descriptions have been prepared by the respective faculty bloggers.

Professor Derek Bambauer

http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/infolaw/

Info/Law is a blog written by Professors Tim Armstrong (University of Cincinnati College of Law), Derek Bambauer (Wayne State University Law School), and Bill McGeveran (University of Minnesota Law School). It covers information law - the convergence of intellectual property doctrine, communications regulation, First Amendment norms, and new technology.

Professor Linda Beale

http://ataxingmatter.blogs.com/tax/

A Taxing Matter is a blog that primarily addresses U.S. federal income and payroll taxes and related budgetary matters. The blog discusses how our tax system works, who pays and who doesn't pay taxes, and the use and politicization of information about taxes. The focus is primarily on ordinary Americans in the middle and lower income distribution, but the blog also addresses corporate tax issues, tax shelters, the intersection of ethical and statutory requirements for tax practitioners, tax legislation, and interesting court cases. Blog postings also present brief summaries of current scholarship on taxes.

Professor Peter Henning

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/whitecollarcrime_blog/

The White Collar Crime Prof Blog is part of the Law Professor Blog Network. The focus is on current developments in a wide range of criminal prosecutions and law enforcement investigations at the federal and state level, including corruption, securities fraud, perjury, corporate misconduct. The authors are Professor Peter Henning and Professor Ellen Podgor of Stetson University.

Professor Michael McIntyre

http://www.law.wayne.edu/tad/

Professor McIntyre has recently designed and created a website (Taxation and Development) where a group of international tax specialists post materials of interest to tax officials in developing countries and to researchers unterested in taxation and development. The web site collects, inter alia, primary tax reform documents, representative tax treaties, and recent academic research.

I also have started a blog.

http://deanwublog.classcaster.org/blog/