Tracy A. Kaye

Tracy A. Kaye

Professor of Law

  • Degrees:

  • J.D., Georgetown University Law Center
  • M.S.T., DePaul University
  • B.S., University of Illinois
  • Contact:

  • kayetrac@shu.edu
  • Tel:  973-642-8455
  • SSRN Site link
  • Curriculum Vitae
  • Courses:

  • Comparative Tax Law
  • Federal Income Tax
  • International Tax Planning

Current
Faculty News

Prof. Franzese to present Leadership with Purpose to Knights of Columbus, Eastern Region, NJ, May 20.

Professor Marina Lao to present Resale Price Maintenance: A Reassessment of its Harms and Benefits” at the ACADEMIC SOCIETY FOR COMPETITION LAW CONFERENCE at George Washington, June 17.

Professor Lori Nessel has published Externalized Borders and the Invisible Refugee, 40 COLUM. HUMAN RTS. L. REV. 625 (2009)

Professor Carl Coleman will serve as rapporteur for a WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION meeting on Research Ethics in International Epidemic Response, in Geneva, June 10-11,

Professor Chinh Q Le will present Racially Integrated Education and the Role of the Federal Government at a Capitol Hill POLICY BRIEFING, June 12

Dean Kathleen M. Boozang and Professor Simone Handler-Hutchinson have published Monitoring Corporate Corruption: DOJ's Use of Deferred Prosecution Agreements in Health Care, 35 AM. J. L. & MED. 89 (2009)

Professor Tracy Kaye has published Europe’s Balancing Act: Trends in Taxation, 62 TAX L. REV. 193 (2009)

Professor Carl Coleman has published Do Physicians' Legal Duties Conflict with Public Health Values? The Case of Antibiotic Overprescription in the JOURNAL OF BIOETHICAL INQUIRY.

More News

Faculty Profile

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Tracy A. Kaye

Professor of Law

Professor Tracy Kaye, the Co-Director of the IRS Chief Counsel's Externship Program and the Dean Acheson Legal Stage Program, specializes in federal income, international and comparative tax law.

During the summer of 2007, Professor Kaye was a visiting scholar at the Max Planck Institute for Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law in Munich, Germany. Her research was selected for the 3rd annual Comparative Law Work-in-Progress Workshop at the University of Michigan Law School in May, 2008. Her resulting article The Gentle Art of Corporate Seduction: Tax Incentives in the United States and the European Union was published in the University of Kansas Law Review in the fall of 2008.

Professor Kaye is currently Vice Chair of the ABA Tax Section’s Teaching Taxation Committee. She is also the Co-Director of Seton Hall Law School’s Dean Acheson Legal Stage program, sponsored by the European Court of Justice and the American Embassy in Luxembourg to promote understanding of European Union Law among American lawyers. During 1998, she was the Director of the Seton Hall Law School “Law in Italy” program. She was a visiting professor at the University of International Business and Economics, School of Law, Beijing, China, Albert-Ludwigs-Universitat Freiburg, Germany and the University of Leiden, the Netherlands. She has also given guest lectures for academic, governmental and professional audiences in the United States, Europe and Asia. In spring 2002, she was a Fulbright Senior Scholar at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universitat, Freiburg, Germany. She is also an Associate Member of the European Association of Tax Law Professors.

Prior to beginning her academic career at Seton Hall Law School in 1991, Professor Kaye studied law and taxation at the Universities of Georgetown, DePaul and Illinois. She worked as a tax legislative advisor for a U.S. Senator, who was a member of the Senate Finance Committee, and practiced and taught tax for Arthur Young & Co. (d.b.a. Ernst & Young) in Chicago, Boston and Washington, D.C. She earned a B.S. in Accountancy, magna cum laude, at the University of Illinois; an M.S. in Taxation at DePaul University; and her J.D., cum laude, at Georgetown University Law Center.

Commentary Europe’s Balancing Act: Trends in Taxation, 62 Tax L. Rev. 193 (2009).

The Gentle Art of Corporate Seduction: Tax Incentives in the United States and the European Union, 57 U. Kan. L. Rev. 93 (2008).

United States - National Report: Constitutional Limitations on the Legislative Power to Tax in the United States, 15 Mich. St. Int'l L. 481 (2007) (with Stephen W. Mazza).

LexisNexis Tax Advisor - Federal Topical, Chapter 1D:9, "Interest Expense" (2007).

Tax Discrimination: A Comparative Analysis of U.S. and EU Approaches, in Comparative Fiscal Federalism: Comparing the European Court of Justice and the U.S. Supreme Court's Tax Jurisprudence , (Avi-Yonah, Hines & Lang, eds) (Kluwer International Law 2006).