Saint Louis Universty School of Law
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ordoweh@slu.edu

3700 Lindell Blvd.
St. Louis, MO 63108

General Inquiries:
314.977.2766

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EDUCATION
Washington University, A.B. 1967; University of Chicago, M.A. 1970; Ph.D. Comprehensive Examinations 1971; University of Chicago School of Law, J.D. 1975.


Visiting Professor in Germany and China; Lecturer in Germany, Denmark, Sweden, South Africa, Namibia and Poland.


Recipient, 2002 German Academic Exchange Service Fellowship, 1999 and 1997 Thompson and Coburn Faculty Writing Award, 1995 German Marshall Fund Fellowship.


Recognized Specialist in the Area of U.S. Taxation, Investment and Business Law.


AREAS OF EXPERTISE

Corporate Finance
Federal Income Tax
Hedge Funds
International Transactions
Law and Literature
Legal Ethics
Taxation


COURSES
Taxation
Corporate Taxation
Partnership Taxation
Fiduciary Taxation
Corporate Finance
Business Associations
Seminar on Law and Literature
Seminar on Taxation


Faculty Listing

 

Henry M. Ordower

Professor of Law
Co-Director, Center for International and Comparative Law

Henry Ordower says his Ph.D. studies in Scandinavian languages helped pave the way for his studies in tax law. “There’s no language quite so foreign as the Internal Revenue Code,” he jokes.

In his more than 25 years of teaching and scholarship, Professor Ordower has established himself as an expert in deciphering tax codes. He has written numerous articles in domestic and international publications on developments and complexities in U.S. taxation, estate planning, compensation deferral, trusts, private investment companies and securities regulation. He lectures frequently both at home and abroad, primarily in Germany and China. He has traveled to approximately 120 countries and is fluent in two languages other than English, and conversant in eight others.

Professor Ordower’s most current scholarship explores both fundamental taxation concepts of capitalization and deduction and moderating power disparities in the delivery of legal services. In a recent publication, he argues that the zealous representation model of contemporary legal practice — with its emphasis on primacy of the client — causes lawyers to assist and motivate their clients to exploit clients’ power advantages in non-litigation contexts.

Ordower joined the School of Law in 1977 after two years of practice in tax law. “Tax law is extremely challenging — like a puzzle,” he says. “And its impact is enormous. Taxes both reflect and drive social policy.”

Professor Ordower sees himself as a mixture of theoretician, teacher and practitioner. He maintains an active practice in the private sector on taxation matters that include corporate and partnership transactions, tax shelters, investment pools and estate planning. “I think it essential to continue practice alongside teaching in tax law because so much of the theoretical development emerges from the practice,” says Ordower.

Saint Louis Universty School of Law