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  • "This book provides an extensive account of the origins and evolution of the general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR), and offers a comprehensive examination and appraisal of the rule. The book's 28 chapters encompass a wide variety of perspectives on the GAAR; contributors include tax practitioners, academics from around the world, and government officials from the Canada Revenue Agency and the Department of Justice, as well as the former Supreme Court of Canada justice who wrote the reasons for judgment in the leading GAAR case. The book, unique in the thoroughness of its approach and the diversity of its points of view, is intended as the go-to source for government officials, tax professionals, academics, and judges--a reference book covering all aspects of the GAAR: its historical background, its major structural features and shortcomings, the evolution of the case law dealing with the GAAR, and the interpretive issues that continue to cause uncertainty."-- Provided by publisher.

  • "Dedicated to Peter Hogg, Principles of Canadian Income Tax Law, 10th Edition elucidates Canadian income tax law in simple, concise, and non-technical language. The book encourages us to think deeply and critically about the important role of income tax in Canadian society.It emphasizes the principles of income tax law, the policies that influence and underlie the system, and its major features and context. The book upholds tax law as a rational system contributing to Canadas socio-economic fabric. Income tax is the main instrument for financing and sharing among Canadians the cost of collective consumption of goods and services and expressing notions of social welfare, distributive justice, and political civility." --Publisher.

Last update from database: 2/8/26, 12:06 AM (UTC)

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