6 research outputs found

    Do Investment Treaties Prescribe a Deferential Standard of Review

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    The dramatic rise in foreign investment in recent decades has brought with it a corresponding increase in the number of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) and, in turn, the number of international investment disputes arising under those treaties. Investment treaty arbitration is the predominant method used to settle those disputes and has certain advantages for both foreign investors and host states compared to available alternatives, but it can tread on delicate issues typically within the domaine rieservd of states. The concern about due regard for sovereign interests in this context is far from purely academic. In the past twenty years, the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) settled nearly ten times as many investor-state disputes as it settled in the previous twenty-five years, and the number of disputes currently pending before ICSID is more than half the number it has settled in toto. Backlash against the system appears to be on the rise and pullback by states is evident in their efforts to renegotiate or terminate existing BITs, to include novel provisions intended to safeguard their regulatory space in new BITs, and, most dramatically, to exit the system altogether. On January 24, 2012, Venezuela became the third state in five years to denounce the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes Between States and Nationals of Other States (ICSID Convention)

    Exit, Voice, and Loyalty in Investment Treaty Arbitration

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    I. Introduction II. The Investment Treaty Arbitration Organization ... A. What Organization? ... B. A Look Inside the Club III. Exit, Voice, and Loyalty ... A. Exit: A Long, Difficult, and Open Road to the Door … 1. The Three Types of Exit and the Unavailability of Selective Exit ... 2. The Long Road to Formal Exit ... 3. The Operation of Exit ... B. Voice: From Protest to Prescription ... 1. Protest ... 2. Interpretation ... 3. Prescription ... 4. The Operation of Voice ... C. The Interplay of Exit and Voice, and the Question of Loyalty ... 1. The Interplay and Relative Effectiveness of Exit and Voice ... 2. The Question and Role of Member Loyalty IV. Conclusio

    Do Investment Treaties Prescribe a Deferential Standard of Review

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    The dramatic rise in foreign investment in recent decades has brought with it a corresponding increase in the number of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) and, in turn, the number of international investment disputes arising under those treaties. Investment treaty arbitration is the predominant method used to settle those disputes and has certain advantages for both foreign investors and host states compared to available alternatives, but it can tread on delicate issues typically within the domaine rieservd of states. The concern about due regard for sovereign interests in this context is far from purely academic. In the past twenty years, the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) settled nearly ten times as many investor-state disputes as it settled in the previous twenty-five years, and the number of disputes currently pending before ICSID is more than half the number it has settled in toto. Backlash against the system appears to be on the rise and pullback by states is evident in their efforts to renegotiate or terminate existing BITs, to include novel provisions intended to safeguard their regulatory space in new BITs, and, most dramatically, to exit the system altogether. On January 24, 2012, Venezuela became the third state in five years to denounce the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes Between States and Nationals of Other States (ICSID Convention)

    Judicialization Without Tenure: Principal and Regime Complexes in Investment Arbitration

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