Investment protection treaties generally include, in one form or another, the obligation to treat investments fairly and equitably. This book examines the relationship between this obligation and the minimum standard that can be found in customary international law, tracing the history of both concepts, their differences and similarities.
Investment protection treaties generally include, in one form or another, the obligation to treat investments fairly and equitably. This book examines the relationship between this obligation and the minimum standard that can be found in customary international law, tracing the history of both concepts, their differences and similarities.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Martins Paparinskis is a Lecturer at University College London. He has previously been a Junior Research Fellow at Merton College, University of Oxford, and a postdoctoral fellow at the New York University. Martins Paparinskis holds a DPhil from the University of Oxford.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction PART I. DEVELOPMENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL MINIMUM STANDARD 1: International Minimum Standard and International Law-Making 2: Making of the International Minimum Standard (-1930s) 3: Development of the International Minimum Standard (1940s-) PART II. SOURCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL MINIMUM STANDARD 4: Most-favoured-nation Clause: A Case Study 5: International Minimum Standard and the Law of Treaties 6: International Minimum Standard and General International Law PART III. CONTENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL MINIMUM STANDARD 7: Investment Treaties, General International Law, and International Human Rights Law 8: International Minimum Standard and the Administration of Justice 9: International Minimum Standard and the Protection of Property Conclusion Appendix: EJIL Talk! blog discussion
Introduction PART I. DEVELOPMENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL MINIMUM STANDARD 1: International Minimum Standard and International Law-Making 2: Making of the International Minimum Standard (-1930s) 3: Development of the International Minimum Standard (1940s-) PART II. SOURCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL MINIMUM STANDARD 4: Most-favoured-nation Clause: A Case Study 5: International Minimum Standard and the Law of Treaties 6: International Minimum Standard and General International Law PART III. CONTENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL MINIMUM STANDARD 7: Investment Treaties, General International Law, and International Human Rights Law 8: International Minimum Standard and the Administration of Justice 9: International Minimum Standard and the Protection of Property Conclusion Appendix: EJIL Talk! blog discussion
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