In law schools, "tax law" is a sub-discipline and area of specialist study. Tax law specialists are often employed in consultative roles, and may also be involved in litigation.
Many U.S. law schools require about 30 semester credit hours of required courses and approximately 60 hours or more of electives. Law students pick and choose available courses on which to focus before graduation with the J.D. degree in the United States.
This freedom allows law students to take many
tax courses such as federal taxation, estate and
gift tax, and estates and successions before
completing the Juris Doctor and taking the bar
exam in a particular U.S. state.
There are many fine LLM or Masters in Laws
Graduate programs currently being offered in the
United States, United Kingdom, Australia,
Netherlands etc. Many of these programs offer
the opportunity to focus on domestic and
international taxation.
In
the United States most LLM programs require that
the candidate be a graduate of an American Bar
Association-accredited law school while a mere
graduate law degree is a sufficient eligibility
criterion in other countries for admission to
LLM in Taxation law programmes.
There are hundreds of accredited business schools in the USA. Many are accredited by the AACSB or ACBSP or recognized by AAFM. These undergraduate or graduate programs may allow the student to major or graduate with a tax related degree such as a Masters in Taxation.
Also, the undergraduate focus on accounting
would allow a student to go the Certified Public
Accountant (CPA) track. After a student
completes the individual state or jurisdictional
requirements for accounting, the applicant may
sit for the Uniform Certified Public Accountant
Examination.
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