Skip to content
Houston Business and Tax Law Journal
  • Home
  • About
    • About HBTLJ
    • Alumni
    • Blog
    • Boards
    • Membership
    • Subscriptions
    • Symposium
  • Articles Archive
  • HBTLJ Online Publication
  • Submissions
  • Contact
  • Donate
Menu Close
  • Home
  • About
    • About HBTLJ
    • Alumni
    • Blog
    • Boards
    • Membership
    • Subscriptions
    • Symposium
  • Articles Archive
  • HBTLJ Online Publication
  • Submissions
  • Contact
  • Donate

Volume IX

  1. Home>
  2. Articles Archive>
  3. Volume IX

Volume IX

2009 Ed.

Issue I

It’s Time to Do Something About the Tax Gap
Richard B. Malamud and Richard O. Parry

Shareholder Oppression in Texas Close Corporations: Majority Rule (Still) Isn’t What it Used to Be
Douglas K. Moll

Regulating Immigration Through Fiscal Policy making: Reexamining Texas’ New Margin Tax
Jaime Vasquez

In Re Seagate: Federal Circuit Overrules Long-Standing Willful Infringement Precedent
Syed Ahmed

Major Record Labels and the RIAA: Dinosaurs in a Digital Age?
Patrick Fogarty

Solving Stock Option Compensation: Why Book-Tax Conformity May Not Be the Answer
Daniel L. Slaton

Issue II

Introduction: Tax Evasion as White Collar Fraud
Geraldine Szott Moohr

What is Wrong with Tax Evasion?
Stuart P. Green

Federal Criminal Tax Enforcement in 2009: The Role of Criminal Tax Enforcement in the Federal “Voluntary” Self-Assessment and Payment Tax System
Robert Edwin Davis and Danny S. Ashby

Tax Obstruction Crimes: Is Making the IRS’s Job Harder Enough?
John A. Townsend

Issue III

Chuck vs. Goliath: Basis of Stock Received in Demutualization of Mutual Insurance Companies
Stephen J. Olsen

Criminals Don’t Pay: Using Tax Fraud to Prohibit Organized Crime
Donald Crump

Catch Me If You Can: Relinquishing Citizenship for Taxation Purposes after the 2008 Heart Act
Yu Hang Sunny Kwong

Patent Licensing and the Emergence of a New Patent Market
Yuichi Watanabe

About Us

The Houston Business and Tax Law Journal is a student managed publication dedicated to scholarly research and the academic advancement in business, tax, and corporate law.

Editorial Board

  • Board 24Opens in a new tab