nothing like its antecedents thirty years ago. In significant part, it owes this modern
sophistication to tax. More specifically, it owes its inter-disciplinary character to the work of
Hiroshi Kaneko. When Kaneko came to Japanese tax law in the late 1950s, he came to a
field like most other Japanese legal fields—intellectually isolated, and overwhelmingly
doctrinal. Through a novel interpretive theory, Kaneko created a way for tax scholars to …