I have posted to SSRN the 2021 editions of my Federal Tax Procedure Book. I have not been formally notified by SSRN that they have been accepted (whatever that means; the author paper page shows them as “Submitted;” when accepted the status will change to “Distributed.”). Nevertheless, it appears that they are available for the community to download.
- Federal Tax Procedure (2021 Student Ed.), SSRN here.
- Federal Tax Procedure (2021 Practitioner Ed.), SSRN here.
Looking toward the next editions in August 2022, I am constantly revising the 2021 edition which became the working draft for the 2022 editions. I make hundreds of changes during the year, some to add new "stuff," others to correct or better state the old "stuff," and still others for reasons that feel right at the time. For the significant changes, I post the changes on the Federal Tax Procedure Blog page to the right titled "Federal Tax Procedure Book 2021 Editions Updates (8/9/21)", here. Each time I make post a significant change, I reset the date in parentheses.
I ask that those desiring a copy of either or both editions download from the SSRN web site. SSRN maintains statistics on downloads that are useful for scholars. So, please, rather than sharing a copy of the pdf in each case, direct anyone you think may be interested to the SSRN site page for the publication so that the download metric can be useful.
Also, I urge those using the book to advise me when they think the book can be improved. Most importantly I would like to know where I have misstated or omitted something of importance. Also, even for more mundane matters such as wording or syntax that can be improved. Your input will permit me to make updates on the Federal Tax Procedure Blog and then make the 2022 version better.
Thank you.
This blog entry is cross-posted on the Federal Tax Procedure Blog, here.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are moderated. Jack Townsend will review and approve comments only to make sure the comments are appropriate. Although comments can be made anonymously, please identify yourself (either by real name or pseudonymn) so that, over a few comments, readers will be able to better judge whether to read the comments and respond to the comments.