DLA Piper raises three to tax partnership

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

DLA Piper raises three to tax partnership

Doris Ho, Alison Maxwell and Makiko Takewaki have become partners of DLA Piper’s tax practice.

doris-ho50.jpg

Ho (pictured left), in Hong Kong, advises multinational clients on the tax aspects of corporate acquisitions and restructurings.

Maxwell’s (pictured right) international tax practice covers advice on cross-border financing, operational structuring, cross-

alison-maxwell50.jpg
border M&A and post-acquisition integration for a wide range of clients, from startups to multibillion-dollar multinationals. She is based in Washington, DC.

makiko-takewaki50.jpg

Takewaki (pictured left) is the head of the Japan tax group in Tokyo. Her principal areas of practice are the international and domestic tax laws of transactions such as M&A.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The UK firm made the appointments as it seeks to recruit 160 new partners over the next two years
The network’s tax service line grew more than those for audit and assurance, advisory and legal services over the same period
The deal is a ‘real win’ for US-based multinationals and its announcement is a welcome relief, experts have told ITR
Tom Goldstein, who is now a blogger, is being represented by US law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson
In looking at the impact of taxation, money won't always be all there is to it
Australia’s Tax Practitioners Board is set to kick off 2026 with a new secretary to head the administrative side of its regulatory activities.
Ireland’s Department of Finance reported increased income tax, VAT and corporation tax receipts from 2024; in other news, it’s understood that HSBC has agreed to pay the French treasury to settle a tax investigation
The Australian Taxation Office believes the Swedish furniture company has used TP to evade paying tax it owes
Supermarket chain Morrisons is facing a £17 million ($23 million) tax bill; in other news, Donald Trump has cut proposed tariffs
The controversial deal will allow US-parented groups to be carved out from key aspects of pillar two
Gift this article