Georgia Law Professor Walter Hellerstein presents at Vienna University of Economics and Business

Distinguished Research Professor & Shackelford Distinguished Professor in Taxation Law Emeritus Walter Hellerstein presented as part of a panel on taxable persons and related issues in VAT law at the Court of Justice of the European Union Conference held at the Vienna University of Economics and Business in Austria during January. 

A description of the conference can be found below:

This conference will focus on the recent case law of the Court of Justice in the area of indirect taxation. The judgment rendered from September 2018 onwards and important previous judgments will be analyzed by panels consisting of leading academics, judges, government representatives and business representatives.

Hellerstein joined the University of Georgia School of Law faculty in 1978 and was named the Francis Shackelford Distinguished Professor in Taxation Law during 1999 and a UGA Distinguished Research Professor in 2011. He taught in the areas of state and local taxation, international taxation and federal income taxation until he retired from teaching at the School of Law in 2015. He is currently a Visiting Professor at the Vienna University of Economics and Business, and he remains actively involved in his scholarship, consulting and, in particular, his work as an academic advisor to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Georgia Law students compete in Vis arbitration moot in Vienna, Austria

A team of students recently represented the University of Georgia School of Law at the 31st annual Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot in Vienna, Austria. 

The 2023-2024 team comprised 2Ls Jacob (“Jake”) Wood, Tiffany Torchia, Olha (“Olia”) Kaliuzhna, and Patrick Smith. Among those who supported their efforts were numerous coaches: 3Ls Hanna Esserman and Yekaterina (“Kat”) Ko, with support from 3Ls Sandon Fernandes and Benjamin (“Ben”) Price, and Georgia Law Dean Peter B. “Bo” Rutledge. They worked together beginning in October, writing two briefs and preparing for oral advocacy. In early February, the team also participated in the Fordham School of Law Vis Pre-Moot in New York. 

This year, 373 teams from 89 jurisdictions around the world competed in Austria. Alongside more than 2,500 students, the Georgia Law team competed for several days. 

Reflecting on the last six months of Vis, Patrick shared,

“As a member of the Vis Moot team, I worked with my teammates to research, brief, and argue an international commercial arbitration case that reflected a real life issue. At the Vis competition in Vienna, we met and competed against teams from around the world who had all worked on the same case, which was such a unique experience. We were lucky to have the guidance, expertise, and support of Dean Rutledge. Overall, Vis exposed me to the global nature of commercial arbitration and gave me an increased appreciation of international law.

To learn more about the Vis Moot team at Georgia Law, visit our website here.