Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment

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Hauptverfasser: Newcombe, Andrew (VerfasserIn), Paradell, Lluis (VerfasserIn)
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Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Austin [u.a.] Wolters Kluwer Law & Business [u.a.] 2009
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adam_text Titel: Law and practice of investment treaties Autor: Newcombe, Andrew Jahr: 2009 Table of Contents Authors Preface xix Acknowledgements xxi List of Abbreviations xxiii Guide to Investment Treaty Resources xxix Chapter 1 Historical Development of Investment Treaty Law 1 Introduction 1 §1.1 A unique treaty framework 1 I Historical Origins of International Investment Law 3 §1.2 Early history 3 §1.3 Diplomatic protection 5 § 1.4 Dispute settlement by claims commissions and international arbitration 7 §1.5 Use and abuse of diplomatic protection 8 §1.6 Colonial territories and extraterritorial jurisdiction 10 §1.7 The minimum standard of treatment 11 §1.8 The Calvo Doctrine 13 §1.9 Early jurisprudence on the minimum standard of treatment 14 §1.10 Efforts to codify treatment standards in the 1920s and 1930s 15 §1.11 Convention on the Treatment of Foreigners 16 §1.12 Seventh International Conference of American States 17 §1.13 The Hull Rule 18 II Post-WWII Developments 18 §1.14 Decolonization and nationalizations 18 §1.15 The Havana Charter and the International Trade Organization 19 vi Table of Contents §1.16 Non-governmental initiatives to create a multilateral legal framework for investment 20 §1.17 Bilateral and regional initiatives 22 §1.18 Increasing resort to international arbitration post-WWII 24 §1.19 New York Convention 25 §1.20 Permanent Sovereignty Over Natural Resources 26 § 1.21 International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes 27 § 1.22 OECD Convention on the Protection of Foreign Property 30 §1.23 Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States 31 § 1.24 Draft UN Code of Conduct on Transnational Corporations 33 §1.25 OECD Declaration on International Investment and Multinational Enterprises 33 §1.26 Lump sum agreements and national claims commissions 34 § 1.27 Investment disputes before the International Court of Justice 35 §1.28 Iran-US Claims Tribunal 39 § 1.29 Foreign investment insurance 39 III International Investment Agreements 41 §1.30 The origins of international investment agreements 41 §1.31 The advent of treaty-based investor-state arbitration in BITs 44 §1.32 BITs - the 1970s and 1980s 46 §1.33 BITs - the 1990s 47 § 1.34 World Bank Guidelines 49 §1.35 Developments in Latin America 50 § 1.36 Developments in Africa, Middle East and Asia 52 §1.37 North American Free Trade Agreement 53 §1.38 Energy Charter Treaty 53 §1.39 World Trade Organization 54 §1.40 Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) 55 §1.41 WTO Working Group on the Relationship between Trade and Investment and the Doha Declaration 55 §1.42 Chinese IIAs 56 §1.43 Indian IIAs 57 IV Current Status of the Network of IIAs 57 § 1.44 The expanding network of IIAs 57 §1.45 The increase in investor-state arbitrations 58 §1.46 IIA jurisprudence 59 §1.47 Renegotiation and new model IIAs 61 § 1.48 Investment promotion effects of IIAs 62 §1.49 Critiques of IIAs 63 V Structure and Scope of Application of IIAs 65 § 1.50 The structure of IIAs 65 § 1.51 The scope of application - investment 65 §1.52 The scope of application - investors 68 §1.53 Dispute settlement 70 Table of Contents vii Chapter 2 Applicable Substantive Law and Interpretation 75 Introduction 75 §2.1 Applicable law and interpretation 75 §2.2 Meaning of applicable substantive law 75 §2.3 Relevance of the applicable law 78 I Choice of Law Clauses 79 §2.4 Express choice of law clauses 79 §2.5 Distinction from other clauses 84 §2.6 Choice of law clauses in arbitration rules 85 II Relevant Sources of Law in IIA Disputes 86 §2.7 Laws relevant to IIA disputes 86 §2.8 Law pleaded and iura novit curia 88 III Role of the IIA 91 §2.9 The IIA as the primary source of law 91 §2.10 The need to supplement the IIA 91 IV Role of Municipal Law 92 §2.11 Existence of the investment as a domestic law issue 92 §2.12 Other matters to which domestic law is relevant 93 §2.13 The renvoi of international law to domestic law 95 §2.14 The relevance of domestic court decisions 95 §2.15 Domestic law questions as jurisdictional issues 95 §2.16 Criticism of the attitude of IIA tribunals towards domestic law 96 §2.17 Limitations to the role of domestic law 97 §2.18 Subsequent changes in the domestic law 98 V Role of International Law 98 §2.19 International law as the law applicable to issues of liability 98 §2.20 IIAs and international law as part of domestic law 100 §2.21 Domestic law applied alongside international law on issues of liability 101 VI Applicable International Law 102 §2.22 Sources of international law in IIA disputes 102 §2.23 Precedents 102 §2.24 Inconsistent decisions 105 §2.25 Human rights 107 VII Interpretation of IIAs 109 §2.26 Treaty interpretation as the process of applying the proper law 109 §2.27 International law rules on treaty interpretation 110 §2.28 Methods of interpretation 111 viii Table of Contents §2.29 Object and purpose, preambles and pro-investor or pro-state interpretations 113 §2.30 Interpretations and amendments to IIAs by the contracting states 117 §2.31 Interpretation and the adjudicative function under IIAs 119 Chapter 3 Promotion, Admission and Establishment Obligations 121 Introduction 121 §3.1 Overview 121 §3.2 Customary international law obligations 121 §3.3 IIA obligations 122 I Treaty Titles and Preambles 122 §3.4 Treaty practice 122 §3.5 The use of the treaty title and preamble in interpreting IIA obligations 124 II Promotion and Encouragement Obligations 126 §3.6 Promotion and encouragement 126 §3.7 Favourable conditions 130 III Admission and Establishment 132 §3.8 Distinguishing admission and establishment 132 §3.9 Rationale for freedom of admission and establishment 132 §3.10 Domestic regulation of foreign investment 133 §3.11 Treaty models for admission and establishment 134 §3.12 The post-entry model 134 §3.13 The pre-entry model 137 §3.14 WTO General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) 140 IV Other Entry Obligations 142 §3.15 Entry of personnel 142 §3.16 Senior management and offices 144 §3.17 Granting of permits 145 §3.18 Special formalities for establishment 146 Chapter 4 National Treatment 147 Introduction 147 §4.1 Non-discrimination in international economic law 147 §4.2 A relative standard 148 §4.3 A treaty-based obligation 149 Table of Contents ix §4.4 IIA prohibitions on discriminatory measures 150 §4.5 Overview of the issues covered in this chapter 150 I Background on National Treatment in IIAs 150 §4.6 National treatment - purpose and definition 150 §4.7 Historical background and development 152 II Treaty Practice 156 §4.8 General overview of treaty practice 156 §4.9 Establishment: pre-entry and post-entry models 158 III Application of National Treatment 159 §4.10 The two elements of national treatment analysis 159 A The Comparator 159 §4.11 The basis for comparison 159 §4.12 Sequence of analysis 162 §4.13 Relevant factors in comparing investors and investments 164 §4.14 Economic sector and the existence of the competitive relationship 164 §4.15 IIA jurisprudence on determining the comparator based on economic sector 165 §4.16 The relevance of WTO like products jurisprudence to the like circumstances determination 170 §4.17 The existence of protectionist intent or motive 174 §4.18 Regulatory purpose of the measure 176 §4.19 The absence of foreign or domestic comparators 180 B The Standard of Treatment 181 §4.20 Treaty provisions 181 §4.21 Meaning of treatment 182 §4.22 De facto analysis 182 §4.23 Comparisons of treatment 183 §4.24 Examples of less favourable treatment 184 §4.25 Better of national and MFN treatment? 186 §4.26 Best treatment or average treatment? 186 §4.27 Application to sub-state units 188 FV Exceptions and Reservations 189 §4.28 Exceptions and reservations 189 Chapter 5 Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment 193 Introduction 193 §5.1 Principle and rationale 193 §5.2 A conventional not a customary obligation 193 f x Table of Contents §5.3 IIA prohibitions on discriminatory measures 194 §5.4 Overview of the issues covered in this chapter 194 I Background on MFN Treatment in IIAs 195 §5.5 MFN treatment - principle and definition 195 §5.6 Historical background and forms of MFN 198 II Treaty Practice 201 §5.7 General overview of treaty practice 201 §5.8 Meaning of treatment 203 III The Scope of MFN Treatment 204 §5.9 The subject matter of MFN treatment 204 §5.10 Does MFN treatment apply to investor-state arbitration clauses? 205 §5.11 MFN clauses applied to avoid local remedy requirements 208 §5.12 MFN clauses applied to provide subject matter jurisdiction 210 §5.13 Assessment of IIA MFN jurisprudence 216 §5.14 Using MFN to confer more favourable scope of application 222 §5.15 Application of MFN to investment or investors 223 §5.16 The treaty practice response to the application of MFN to investor-state arbitration provisions 223 IV Applying MFN Treatment 224 §5.17 Similarities and differences with the national treatment analysis 224 §5.18 The two elements of MFN treatment analysis 225 A The Comparator 225 §5.19 The basis for comparison 225 §5.20 Comparing the treatment of investors and investments under third state IIAs 226 §5.21 Comparing the treatment of investors and investments under domestic measures 226 §5.22 The existence of a special legal relationship between the host state and investor 227 B The Standard of Treatment 228 §5.23 Treaty provisions 228 §5.24 Less favourable treatment compared to treatment under third state IIAs 228 §5.25 Less favourable treatment under domestic measures 230 §5.26 Better of national and MFN treatment? 231 V Exceptions and Reservations 231 §5.27 Exceptions and reservations 231 Table of Contents xi Chapter 6 Minimum Standards of Treatment 233 Introduction 233 §6.1 Principle and rationale 233 §6.2 Overview 235 I The Minimum Standard of Treatment 235 §6.3 The continued relevance of the minimum standard of treatment 235 §6.4 The content of the minimum standard of treatment 235 §6.5 Denial of justice 238 §6.6 Denial of justice and exhaustion of local remedies 241 §6.7 Due process 244 §6.8 Due diligence 246 §6.9 Arbitrariness 246 §6.10 Discrimination 251 §6.11 Individuals and international human rights law 252 II Treatment in Accordance with International Law 253 §6.12 IIA clauses 253 III Fair and Equitable Treatment 255 §6.13 The baseline of investment protection 255 §6.14 Early treaty practice 255 §6.15 IIA practice 257 §6.16 Meaning of treatment 261 §6.17 No requirement for impairment 262 §6.18 Scope of fair and equitable treatment - investment or investors? 262 §6.19 Interpretive approaches to fair and equitable treatment 263 §6.20 Fair and equitable treatment as an independent treaty standard with an autonomous meaning 264 §6.21 Fair and equitable treatment as reflecting the minimum standard of treatment 268 §6.22 Fair and equitable treatment as an independent treaty standard and customary international law 270 §6.23 Interpretation of Article 1105(1), NAFTA 272 §6.24 General characteristics of the fair and equitable treatment standard 275 §6.25 Specific elements of fair and equitable treatment 279 §6.26 Legitimate expectations 279 §6.27 Discrimination 289 §6.28 Transparency 291 §6.29 Bad faith, coercion, threats and harassment 294 §6.30 A requirement to create favourable conditions? 295 §6.31 The relevance of the conduct of the foreign investor 296 i xii Table of Contents IV Arbitrary, Unreasonable or Discriminatory Measures 298 §6.32 Background 298 §6.33 Treaty practice 299 §6.34 Elements of the guarantee 300 §6.35 Relationship with fair and equitable treatment 301 §6.36 Arbitrary measures 302 §6.37 Unreasonable or unjustifiable measures 303 §6.38 Discriminatory measures 304 §6.39 An effects-based analysis of discrimination 306 §6.40 Overlap with national and MFN treatment clauses 306 V Protection and Security Obligations 307 §6.41 Background 307 §6.42 IIA practice 308 §6.43 Physical protection 309 §6.44 Due diligence, physical protection and the level of host state resources 310 §6.45 Regulatory and legal protection 311 §6.46 Breach of protection and security in the administration of justice 314 VI Compensation for Extraordinary Losses 315 §6.47 Extraordinary losses 315 VII Preservation of Rights/More Favourable Treatment Clauses 317 §6.48 More favourable treatment 317 VIII Exceptions 319 §6.49 Exceptions 319 Chapter 7 Expropriation 321 Introduction 321 §7.1 Expropriation in international law 321 I What Constitutes Expropriation? 322 §7.2 Introduction 322 §7.3 Direct expropriation 324 §7.4 Indirect expropriation 325 §7.5 Attempts to develop international standards for expropriation 328 §7.6 IIA provisions defining expropriation 332 §7.7 More recent model BITs 334 §7.8 Express exceptions for specific measures 336 §7.9 The meaning of the term measures 337 §7.10 Do IIAs expand the scope of expropriation? 338 Table of Contents xiii §7.11 Direct expropriation 340 §7.12 Key principles relating to indirect expropriation 341 §7.13 The form of measure is not determinative 341 §7.14 State intent to expropriate is not a necessary condition 342 §7.15 Creeping expropriation 343 §7.16 The requirement for a substantial deprivation 344 §7.17 Categorizing the object of the deprivation and the question of partial expropriation 348 §7.18 Legitimate and reasonable expectations 350 §7.19 The relationship between domestic law and expropriation 351 §7.20 Breach of contract and expropriation 352 §7.21 Debt contracts and expropriation 355 §7.22 Payments under statutory obligations and expropriation 356 §7.23 Non-expropriatory regulation 357 §7.24 Police powers 358 §7.25 Proportionality and standard of review in assessing police powers 363 §7.26 Transparency and due process in police powers 366 §7.27 Burden of proof with respect to police powers 366 §7.28 A case-by-case analysis 366 §7.29 Effect of a finding of expropriation 368 §7.30 Title to expropriated property 369 II Conditions for Expropriation 369 §7.31 Conditions for a lawful expropriation 369 §7.32 Public purpose 370 §7.33 Non-discrimination 373 §7.34 Due process of law and judicial review 375 §7.35 Contractual undertakings 377 III Compensation 377 §7.36 IIA provisions on compensation 377 A Standard of Compensation 377 §7.37 The standard of compensation in customary international law 377 §7.38 Legal and illegal expropriation in customary international law 379 §7.39 Standard of compensation in IIAs 383 §7.40 MFN and the standard of compensation 385 §7.41 Measuring fair market value - valuation methods 385 §7.42 Going-concern value and discounted cash flow 388 §7.43 Net book value, replacement or liquidation value 390 §7.44 DCF and NBV compared 391 §7.45 Actual investment 391 ; §7.46 Arm s length transactions or third party offer to purchase 392 ; §7.47 Market capitalization 392 xiv Table of Contents §7.48 Reductions 392 B Date for Determining Compensation 393 §7.49 Date of the expropriation 393 C Transferability and Convertibilility 395 §7.50 Timing 395 §7.51 Transferability and convertibility 396 D Interest 396 §7.52 Interest 396 E Judicial Review 398 §7.53 Review 398 Chapter 8 Transfer Rights, Performance Requirements and Transparency 399 Introduction 399 §8.1 Overview 399 I Transfer of Funds 399 §8.2 Introduction 399 §8.3 Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund (IMF Articles) 401 §8.4 OECD Liberalization Codes 403 §8.5 General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) 404 §8.6 Transfer of funds in early investment instruments 404 §8.7 Transfer of funds in IIAs 405 §8.8 The scope of transfer rights 406 §8.9 Types of transfers 407 §8.10 Convertibility rights 411 §8.11 Permissible restrictions on transfers 413 §8.12 Express exceptions to transfer obligations 414 §8.13 Jurisprudence 416 II Prohibitions on Performance Requirements 417 §8.14 Introduction 417 §8.15 Trade-related investment measures (TRIMs) and the WTO TRIMS Agreement 419 §8.16 Performance requirements in the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) 421 §8.17 Performance requirements in IIAs 422 §8.18 The relationship between performance requirements and national treatment 422 §8.19 The relationship between performance requirements and establishment rights 423 Table of Contents xv §8.20 Performance requirements and host state nationals and third parties 423 §8.21 Express exceptions to prohibitions on performance requirements 423 §8.22 Prohibitions on domestic content, sourcing and trade balancing requirements 424 §8.23 Prohibitions on restrictions on sales of goods within host state territory 427 §8.24 Prohibitions on requirements for technology transfer 428 §8.25 Conditions for receipt of advantages 429 §8.26 Other prohibited performance requirements 430 §8.27 Prohibitions on performance requirements in other IIA standards 430 III Transparency Related Standards 431 §8.28 Treaty practice 431 §8.29 Publication of laws, regulations and policies 431 §8.30 Notification and due process requirements 432 Chapter 9 Observance of Undertakings 437 Introduction 437 §9.1 Umbrella clause and other denominations 437 §9.2 Principle, rationale and interpretive uncertainty 438 §9.3 Contracts in international law 438 I History and Treaty Practice 440 §9.4 Origins 440 §9.5 Early treaty practice 441 §9.6 Modern treaty practice 443 §9.7 Placement 444 §9.8 Drafting variations 445 II Applicable Law 448 §9.9 Existence of the obligation to be observed 448 §9.10 Scope and effects of the obligation to be observed 450 III Undertakings Covered 451 §9.11 Contractual undertakings 451 §9.12 Contracts with a foreign owned company 455 §9.13 Unilateral undertakings 457 IV Undertakings Attributable to the State 460 §9.14 State entities and attribution of obligations to the state 460 i xvi Table of Contents §9.15 The application of international law rules of attribution 461 §9.16 Recognition of separate personality under domestic law 463 §9.17 Contract/treaty claim distinction and international rules of attribution 465 V Substantive Content of the Duty of Observance 466 §9.18 Doctrinal debate on the substantive content of the umbrella clause 466 §9.19 The SGS v. Pakistan restrictive approach 466 §9.20 The SGS v. Philippines literal approach 467 §9.21 The governmental breach approach 469 §9.22 The literal approach after SGS v. Philippines 470 §9.23 The correct literal and effet utile approach 471 VI Concurrent Jurisdictions 472 §9.24 The SGS v. Philippines decision to stay proceedings 472 §9.25 The approach to concurrent jurisdiction after SGS v. Philippines 473 VII Limitations 475 §9.26 Domestic law limitations 475 §9.27 Observance of undertakings and stabilization clauses 476 VIII Distinction from other Clauses 477 §9.28 Preservation of rights clause 477 §9.29 Wide dispute resolution clauses 478 Chapter 10 Exceptions and Defences 481 Introduction 481 §10.1 Overview of exceptions and defences 481 I Express Exceptions in IIAs 482 §10.2 Introduction 482 §10.3 The interpretation of exceptions 485 II Security Exceptions 488 §10.4 Treaty practice 488 §10.5 Is the security exception self-judging? 492 §10.6 Exception or excuse - the relationship between security exceptions and necessity 495 §10.7 The scope of the security exception 497 §10.8 Distinction from the war and civil disturbance clause 499 Table of Contents xvii III General Exceptions Modelled on Article XX GATT or Article XIV GATS 500 §10.9 Treaty practice 500 §10.10 The interpretation of general exceptions 503 IV Subject Matter and Obligation-Specific Exceptions 506 §10.11 Overview 506 §10.12 Tax measures 507 §10.13 Subsidies and government procurement 508 §10.14 Miscellaneous exceptions 508 §10.15 Exceptions or reservations for non-conforming measures 508 V Interpretive Guidelines 509 §10.16 Express provisions on environmental measures 509 §10.17 Provisions on relaxation of standards 509 VI Circumstances Precluding Wrongfulness in Customary International Law 510 §10.18 Circumstances precluding wrongfulness 510 §10.19 Consent and waiver 510 §10.20 Force majeure 514 §10.21 Necessity as a circumstance precluding wrongfulness 516 §10.22 IIA jurisprudence on necessity 517 §10.23 Temporal limitations on preclusion of wrongfulness 522 §10.24 Compensation and preclusion of wrongfulness 523 VII Other Defences 524 §10.25 Acquiescence 524 §10.26 Extinctive prescription and laches 525 §10.27 Estoppel 526 Table of Cases 529 Table of Treaties and Other Instruments 555 Index 599
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spellingShingle Newcombe, Andrew
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Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment
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Investments, Foreign Law and legislation
Arbitration and award, International
title Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment
title_auth Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment
title_exact_search Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment
title_full Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment by Andrew Newcombe ; Lluís Paradell
title_fullStr Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment by Andrew Newcombe ; Lluís Paradell
title_full_unstemmed Law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment by Andrew Newcombe ; Lluís Paradell
title_short Law and practice of investment treaties
title_sort law and practice of investment treaties standards of treatment
title_sub standards of treatment
topic Investissements étrangers - Droit international ram
Recht
Investments, Foreign (International law)
Investments, Foreign Law and legislation
Arbitration and award, International
topic_facet Investissements étrangers - Droit international
Recht
Investments, Foreign (International law)
Investments, Foreign Law and legislation
Arbitration and award, International
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018602047&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
work_keys_str_mv AT newcombeandrew lawandpracticeofinvestmenttreatiesstandardsoftreatment
AT paradelllluis lawandpracticeofinvestmenttreatiesstandardsoftreatment