Examines the philosophical foundation of legitimate expectations to create a normative framework for use in investment treaty arbitrationHinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Teerawat Wongkaew is a legal officer at the Department of Treaties and Legal Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Thailand. His current practices focus on treaty-making and public international laws issues, in particular, international investment law, international humanitarian law and the laws of international organizations. He was previously Legal Adviser at the Department of International Economic Affairs of Thailand, involved with the negotiations of bilateral and regional investment treaties as well as free trade agreements and investment treaty disputes. He earned degrees in Law with French Law and Master of Law (LL.M.) from University College London. In 2016, he completed his Ph.D. study at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva. He worked as a legal consultant at International Investment Agreement Division, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
Inhaltsangabe
Part I. Why Do We Need a Theory of Legitimate Expectations?: 1. Introduction; 2. The formalist conception of legitimate expectations and different paradigms of the investment treaty regime: a critique; Part II. What is the Theory of Legitimate Expectations?: 3. Theoretical foundations for the use of moral philosophy of promise and conceptualisation of legitimate expectations; 4. The voluntarist conception of legitimate expectations and enforcement of sovereign promise; 5. 'Letting investors down', protection of trust, and assurance conception of legitimate expectations; 6. Protecting against investors' detrimental reliance: reliance conception of legitimate expectations; 7. In search of the most suitable conception of legitimate expectations; Part III. What is the Application of the Theory of Legitimate Expectations?: 8. Normative consequences of the reliance theory of legitimate expectations; 9. Rethinking remedies for a breach of legitimate expectations: corrective justice and reliance damages.
Part I. Why Do We Need a Theory of Legitimate Expectations?: 1. Introduction; 2. The formalist conception of legitimate expectations and different paradigms of the investment treaty regime: a critique; Part II. What is the Theory of Legitimate Expectations?: 3. Theoretical foundations for the use of moral philosophy of promise and conceptualisation of legitimate expectations; 4. The voluntarist conception of legitimate expectations and enforcement of sovereign promise; 5. 'Letting investors down', protection of trust, and assurance conception of legitimate expectations; 6. Protecting against investors' detrimental reliance: reliance conception of legitimate expectations; 7. In search of the most suitable conception of legitimate expectations; Part III. What is the Application of the Theory of Legitimate Expectations?: 8. Normative consequences of the reliance theory of legitimate expectations; 9. Rethinking remedies for a breach of legitimate expectations: corrective justice and reliance damages.
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