海角原创

Meet the Law and Economy Expert

Law Professor Shayak Sarkar addresses the structure and legal regulation of inequality through scholarship.

Man leans against a table in an outdoor patio
Professor Shayak Sarkar (Gregory Urquiaga/UC 海角原创)

 

As a child of immigrants, grew up with an appreciation for the challenges faced by immigrants and their families.

He has a doctoral degree in economics from Harvard and a law degree from Yale, and he is a Rhodes Scholar with a master鈥檚 degree in social work. Now a professor of law at UC 海角原创, his scholarship addresses the structure and legal regulation of inequality. His substantive interests lie in financial regulation, employment law, immigration and taxation.

But his heart ponders the fears of immigrant parents worried their children will be accosted by ICE officers at school. He grimaces at the thought of the Internal Revenue Service becoming immigration enforcers. He is baffled at the government鈥檚 defunding or dismantling of agencies or USAID that have historically served vulnerable populations under attack. He has published numerous and has been interviewed in major newspapers on these subjects in recent days.

He said the current times have become a catalyst for his teaching, scholarship and advocacy.

鈥淲hether people are documented or not, what we are now seeing is an erosion of everyone鈥檚 rights,鈥 said Sarkar.

He pointed to the Department of Homeland Security鈥檚 recent efforts to obtain tax data from the IRS. He called this 鈥渢he new frontier鈥 of not only invading individual鈥檚 rights but disrespecting the historic independence of the IRS.

鈥淣ow we have a presidential administration and political climate in which people are so focused on immigration enforcement that they 鈥 are eviscerating tax law,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here has generally been an understanding of taxpayer privacy and that is being trampled 鈥 with this extreme version of immigration enforcement.鈥

He said legal theory meets reality today, and he now has national topics to discuss with law students and colleagues. Despite teaching perhaps not the most exciting or popular class at the law school 鈥 international tax law 鈥 he said students who take the course might be interested some day in transactional law, tax law or business law and pursue careers in those fields. He also teaches torts, traditionally taken by first-year students, where he gains some of his students for other classes.

鈥淚 like to think they like my teaching style,鈥 he said, smiling.

Sarkar said he is happy his interests have found a comfortable home at UC 海角原创, where he has been since 2018. Throughout his life, he has lived in multiple rural and urban areas of the United States, but he added he likes 海角原创, the campus, and how it all is part of a region that is home to the state capital.

鈥淜ing Hall is a very special place,鈥 he said, with its focus on public interest law 鈥 with students and faculty who care about civil rights and human rights.

鈥淚t was great to join an institution that was thinking a lot about the things I鈥檝e been thinking about.鈥

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