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English
Cambridge University Press
19 December 2024
From the perspective of individual taxpayers to international tax norm negotiators, the anthropologists in this collection explore how taxes shape our world: our social relationships and value regimes, how we exclude and include, the categories we think with, and the way we share with each other. A first of its kind, it presents an anthropological discussion about tax rooted in ethnographic work. It asks fundamental questions such as: what is tax, what is taxable, and what do taxes do? By forwarding multiple perspectives from around the world about fiscal systems and how they are experienced and constituted, Anthropology and Tax reconceptualises tax in society. In doing so, this volume makes an incisive intervention in what might be one of the most important debates of our time – that of fiscal sociality. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Weight:   737g
ISBN:   9781009254588
ISBN 10:   1009254588
Pages:   388
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  A / AS level
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Foreword Janet Roitman; Advancing an Anthropology of tax Johanna Mugler, Miranda Sheild Johansson and Robin Smith; 1. Becoming the good migrant: how Romanian migrants mobilise taxpayer status Dora-Olivia Vicol; 2. The nurturing state: an intimate portrait of becoming a taxpayer in Ghana Anna-Riikka Kauppinen; 3. An ecology of payments: taxes, cuotas, and fees in highland Bolivia Miranda Sheild Johansson; 4. The Persistence of kindred spirits: tax and values in Istrian distilling Robin Smith; 5. Taxation without hegemony: land, fiscal conflicts, and the limits of post-neoliberalism in Ecuador Jeremy Rayner; 6. Gambling away fraud: tax and speculative governance in Slovakia Nicolette Makovicky; 7. Mottos for a more tax-compliant society: strategies, tax compliance research, and fiscal practices at the Swedish tax agency Lotta Björklund Larsen; 8. General knowledge and particular society: taxation as a way of knowing Olly Owen; 9. The colonial debris in the digitalisation of tax in Kenya Nimmo Elmi; 10. Fiscal citizenship, assimilation, and colonial governance in settler states Kyle Willmott; 11. Fundraising in Fiji: taxation, proceduralism, and a moral economy of accountability Matti Eräsaari; 12. Dead zones of tax inspection: the new strategic direction in the Danish tax authority and its consequences for front staff Karen Boll; 13. Tax Havens, commodified citizenship, and the production of home in a globalised world Greg Rawlings; 14. Sharing beyond the state: International Tax Norm Negotiations at the OECD Johanna Mugler.

Johanna Mugler (Research Associate, University of Bern) authored Measuring Justice (CUP, 2019), and co-edited A World of Indicators (CUP, 2015). She is currently writing Sharing Global Profits: Negotiating Tax Expertise, Value and Advantage at the OECD. She earned the Caroline von Humboldt Award for research on international tax norms (2021). Miranda Sheild Johansson (UKRI Future Leaders Fellow, University College London) has co-edited the Special Issue An Anthropology of the Social Contract (Critique of Anthropology, 2022), authored Tax (Open Encyclopaedia of Anthropology, 2020), and co-founded the EASA Tax Network. Her research has been funded by the UKRI, ESRC, and Leverhulme Trust. Robin Smith (Marie Curie Fellow, Copenhagen Business School) co-edited Beyond the Social Contract: An Anthropology of Tax (Social Analysis, 2020). She has earned research fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies, Wenner-Gren Foundation, Clarendon Fund, and the Independent Social Research Foundation. She founded the Anthropology of Tax Network.

Reviews for Anthropology and Tax: Ethnographies of Fiscal Relations

'Anthropology and tax? But of course! Fiscal questions are, after all, moral ones, and taxes are that peculiar and ancient form of payment stitching peoples to polities, remaking value, subjecthood, citizenship and state in the process. This compelling volume brings together contributions reflecting the crucial insights that deep, ethnographic work on tax relations can yield, including inquiry into the very nature of wealth, governance, recognition, rights, and redemption. With cases spanning the globe, it provides a fantastic starting point for anyone hoping to gain a richer understanding of the one constant in life-besides death-and the machinations of both states and their subjects to evade both death and taxes.' Bill Maurer, Professor of Anthropology and Law, University of California 'The complex and diverse practices of fiscal relations - as embodied in tax, taxpayers, and tax systems - are the substance of this superb volume. Across 14 compelling chapters, scholars provide ethnographical investigations of tax across multiple scales and across historical and geographical contexts. In the process, they contribute meaningfully both to a new anthropology of tax and the perhaps more important task of global tax justice.' Gurminder K. Bhambra, Professor of Historical Sociology, Department of International Relations, University of Sussex 'This book is timely in the face of global upheaval and the pressing need to disrupt entrenched and simplistic views of tax policy (what, who and how we tax) and tax compliance (who pays). Individually, the chapters are fascinating studies providing insights into a wide range of overlooked issues, each worthy of attention in its own right. Collectively, however, the book does much more in daring to question how we currently think about tax and opening up possibilities to think differently.' Lynne Oats, Emeritus Professor of Taxation and Accounting, University of Exeter 'For decades, anthropology has homed in more and more on the state and its capacities, intensively studying its immense power to create and nurture such things as borders, identities, and infrastructure. How strange, then, that far too many of us have shied away from ethnographic research into the central spigot - taxation - that fructifies all of this state growth and power. As this diverse collection of studies attests, it is a fascinating spigot indeed, crucially regulating the highly contested flow of value between citizen and state, while always navigating the uneasy tension between the public and the private. In so doing, the authors have provided us a well-researched, vital, and thought-provoking anchor for a nascent anthropology of taxation for years to come.' Gustav Peebles, Associate Professor in Social Anthropology, Stockholm University 'This book is a must-read for anthropologists and social scientists interested in taxation. The rich introduction is followed by ethnographic papers from around the world and opens up questions of fiscal matters, including ethics, justifications, compliance and resistance.' Soumhya Venkatesan, Professor of Anthropology, University of Manchester


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