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The Yearbook is an annual publication which provides a comprehensive overview of current developments in the international investment law and policy field, focusing on recent trends and issues in foreign direct investment (FDI), investment treaty practice, and investor-state arbitration.
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The Yearbook is an annual publication which provides a comprehensive overview of current developments in the international investment law and policy field, focusing on recent trends and issues in foreign direct investment (FDI), investment treaty practice, and investor-state arbitration.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 656
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 173mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 1066g
- ISBN-13: 9780198809722
- ISBN-10: 0198809727
- Artikelnr.: 49086971
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 656
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 173mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 1066g
- ISBN-13: 9780198809722
- ISBN-10: 0198809727
- Artikelnr.: 49086971
Lisa Sachs is the Director of the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI). Since joining CCSI in 2008, she established and now oversees the three areas of focus for CCSI: investments in extractive industries, investments in land and agriculture, and investment law and policy. She specializes in extractive industries, foreign investment, corporate responsibility, and integrated economic development. She received a B.A. in Economics from Harvard University, and earned her J.D. and an M.A. in International Affairs from Columbia University, where she was a James Kent Scholar and recipient of the Parker School Certificate in International and Comparative Law. Lise Johnson is the Investment Law and Policy Head at the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI). Her work at CCSI centers on analyzing investment treaties and treatybased investor-state arbitrations, and examining the implications those instruments and cases have for host countries' domestic policies and sustainable development strategies. In addition, she concentrates on key institutional and procedural aspects of the investment law framework, including efforts to increase transparency in and legitimacy of investor-state dispute settlement. She has a B.A. from Yale University, J.D. from University of Arizona, LL.M. from Columbia Law School, and is admitted to the bar in California
* Table of Cases
* Table of Primary Sources
* Part I
* 1: Ilan Strauss: Explaining Global Trends in FDI in 2015 and Beyond
* 2: Jesse Coleman, Lisa Sachs, Lise Johnson, and Kanika Gupta:
International Investment Agreements, 2015-2016: A Review Of Trends
And New Approaches
* 3: Kendra Magraw: Notable Developments in International Investment
Arbitration Case Law: 2015-2016
* Part II
* 4: Karen Remmer: The Outcomes of Investment Treaty Arbitration: A
Reassessment
* 5: Mark Feldman: Multinational Enterprises and Investment Treaties
* 6: Shu XU, Yingying WU, Henry Hailong JIA: Investment Law's Roots in
Customary International Law: Why investment law and trade diverge
regarding the Right to Regulate
* 7: Jean-Michel Marcoux: Embedding the International Investment
Regime: An assessment of UNCTAD's proposal for reform
* 8: Eve Bain: When Some Are More Equal Than Others: The need for a
more substantive conception of 'equality of the parties' in
investment arbitration
* 9: Facundo Pérez-Aznar: Federal States and Investment Arbitration
* 10: Giorgio Sacerdoti: Has China Become 'Legally' a Market-Economy
Country on 11 December 2016 under The WTO Antidumping Agreement?
Analyzing an open question
* 11: Chin Leng Lim: Fragrant Harbour and Oyster Mirror: Beijing's
investment treaty policy toward Hong Kong and Macao
* 12: Gus Van Harten and Dayna Nadine Scott: Investment Treaties and
the Internal Vetting of Regulatory Proposals: A Case Study from
Canada (Part 2)
* 13: Ely Caetano Xavier Junior and José Augusto Fontoura Costa:
Expropriation in Brazil's Cooperation and Facilitation Investment
Agreements: A failed attempt to think outside the box
* Table of Primary Sources
* Part I
* 1: Ilan Strauss: Explaining Global Trends in FDI in 2015 and Beyond
* 2: Jesse Coleman, Lisa Sachs, Lise Johnson, and Kanika Gupta:
International Investment Agreements, 2015-2016: A Review Of Trends
And New Approaches
* 3: Kendra Magraw: Notable Developments in International Investment
Arbitration Case Law: 2015-2016
* Part II
* 4: Karen Remmer: The Outcomes of Investment Treaty Arbitration: A
Reassessment
* 5: Mark Feldman: Multinational Enterprises and Investment Treaties
* 6: Shu XU, Yingying WU, Henry Hailong JIA: Investment Law's Roots in
Customary International Law: Why investment law and trade diverge
regarding the Right to Regulate
* 7: Jean-Michel Marcoux: Embedding the International Investment
Regime: An assessment of UNCTAD's proposal for reform
* 8: Eve Bain: When Some Are More Equal Than Others: The need for a
more substantive conception of 'equality of the parties' in
investment arbitration
* 9: Facundo Pérez-Aznar: Federal States and Investment Arbitration
* 10: Giorgio Sacerdoti: Has China Become 'Legally' a Market-Economy
Country on 11 December 2016 under The WTO Antidumping Agreement?
Analyzing an open question
* 11: Chin Leng Lim: Fragrant Harbour and Oyster Mirror: Beijing's
investment treaty policy toward Hong Kong and Macao
* 12: Gus Van Harten and Dayna Nadine Scott: Investment Treaties and
the Internal Vetting of Regulatory Proposals: A Case Study from
Canada (Part 2)
* 13: Ely Caetano Xavier Junior and José Augusto Fontoura Costa:
Expropriation in Brazil's Cooperation and Facilitation Investment
Agreements: A failed attempt to think outside the box
* Table of Cases
* Table of Primary Sources
* Part I
* 1: Ilan Strauss: Explaining Global Trends in FDI in 2015 and Beyond
* 2: Jesse Coleman, Lisa Sachs, Lise Johnson, and Kanika Gupta:
International Investment Agreements, 2015-2016: A Review Of Trends
And New Approaches
* 3: Kendra Magraw: Notable Developments in International Investment
Arbitration Case Law: 2015-2016
* Part II
* 4: Karen Remmer: The Outcomes of Investment Treaty Arbitration: A
Reassessment
* 5: Mark Feldman: Multinational Enterprises and Investment Treaties
* 6: Shu XU, Yingying WU, Henry Hailong JIA: Investment Law's Roots in
Customary International Law: Why investment law and trade diverge
regarding the Right to Regulate
* 7: Jean-Michel Marcoux: Embedding the International Investment
Regime: An assessment of UNCTAD's proposal for reform
* 8: Eve Bain: When Some Are More Equal Than Others: The need for a
more substantive conception of 'equality of the parties' in
investment arbitration
* 9: Facundo Pérez-Aznar: Federal States and Investment Arbitration
* 10: Giorgio Sacerdoti: Has China Become 'Legally' a Market-Economy
Country on 11 December 2016 under The WTO Antidumping Agreement?
Analyzing an open question
* 11: Chin Leng Lim: Fragrant Harbour and Oyster Mirror: Beijing's
investment treaty policy toward Hong Kong and Macao
* 12: Gus Van Harten and Dayna Nadine Scott: Investment Treaties and
the Internal Vetting of Regulatory Proposals: A Case Study from
Canada (Part 2)
* 13: Ely Caetano Xavier Junior and José Augusto Fontoura Costa:
Expropriation in Brazil's Cooperation and Facilitation Investment
Agreements: A failed attempt to think outside the box
* Table of Primary Sources
* Part I
* 1: Ilan Strauss: Explaining Global Trends in FDI in 2015 and Beyond
* 2: Jesse Coleman, Lisa Sachs, Lise Johnson, and Kanika Gupta:
International Investment Agreements, 2015-2016: A Review Of Trends
And New Approaches
* 3: Kendra Magraw: Notable Developments in International Investment
Arbitration Case Law: 2015-2016
* Part II
* 4: Karen Remmer: The Outcomes of Investment Treaty Arbitration: A
Reassessment
* 5: Mark Feldman: Multinational Enterprises and Investment Treaties
* 6: Shu XU, Yingying WU, Henry Hailong JIA: Investment Law's Roots in
Customary International Law: Why investment law and trade diverge
regarding the Right to Regulate
* 7: Jean-Michel Marcoux: Embedding the International Investment
Regime: An assessment of UNCTAD's proposal for reform
* 8: Eve Bain: When Some Are More Equal Than Others: The need for a
more substantive conception of 'equality of the parties' in
investment arbitration
* 9: Facundo Pérez-Aznar: Federal States and Investment Arbitration
* 10: Giorgio Sacerdoti: Has China Become 'Legally' a Market-Economy
Country on 11 December 2016 under The WTO Antidumping Agreement?
Analyzing an open question
* 11: Chin Leng Lim: Fragrant Harbour and Oyster Mirror: Beijing's
investment treaty policy toward Hong Kong and Macao
* 12: Gus Van Harten and Dayna Nadine Scott: Investment Treaties and
the Internal Vetting of Regulatory Proposals: A Case Study from
Canada (Part 2)
* 13: Ely Caetano Xavier Junior and José Augusto Fontoura Costa:
Expropriation in Brazil's Cooperation and Facilitation Investment
Agreements: A failed attempt to think outside the box