Beverly Moran

Beverly Moran is a Professor Emerita of Law at Vanderbilt University, where she teaches about federal income taxation, including individuals, partnerships, tax-exempt organizations and corporations, as well as courses in Law and Cinema, Islamic Law and Race and Law.

In addition to her work on the Internal Revenue Code, Moran’s interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary work encompasses empirical legal studies (“Coitus and Consequences”), international and comparative tax law (“Taxation” in The Oxford Handbook of Legal Studies), Islamic law (“Islamic Law and Elder Care in the Central Asian Edgen System”), labor law (“The Right to Religious Accommodation in Pension Plans”), law and development (“Local Government Tax Incentives for Economic Development”), legal education (“Revisiting the Work We Know So Little About: Race, Wealth, Privilege, and Social Justice”), legal philosophy (“Capitalism and the Tax System: A Search for Social Justice”), and politics (“United States’ Trade Policy and the Exportation of United States’ Culture”).

The pandemic deserves some of the blame for taxpayer delays, but so do years of underfunding the IRS, antiquated computer systems and a dwindling workforce, writes a Vanderbilt University law professor and expert in federal income taxation.
By Beverly Moran
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