Investment treaties protect the investments of foreign investors against interference by the host state: The core standards offer protection against discriminatory or unequitable treatment and expropriation. However, the investment activities can impact on the environment of the host state. The state retains its policy space to regulate for an environmental purpose.Some investment treaties refer to concepts of international environmental law, but do not impose a hierarchy of norms. In practice, it often falls to investment tribunals to distinguish between legitimate regulation and the violation of investors' rights. They decide on the scope of the state's policy space by balancing the opposing interests: Investment tribunals focus on the absence of protectionist intent, procedural propriety and the review of scientific evidence. If the regulatory framework is more stringent when the investment is made, there is less potential for subsequent conflict.
Reihe
Thesis
Dissertationsschrift
2014
Universität Frankfurt/M.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Produkt-Hinweis
Broschur/Paperback
Klebebindung
Maße
Höhe: 23.3 cm
Breite: 15.7 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-428-14506-5 (9783428145065)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Sonja Dünnwald hat in Berlin und Louvain-la-Neuve Rechtswissenschaften studiert und 2005 das Erste Staatsexamen abgelegt. Im Rahmen eines anschließenden Praktikums am Permanent Court of Arbitration und eines LL.M.-Studiengangs am University College London 2006 hat sie sich mit Fragestellungen des Investitionsschutzrechts und des internationalen Umweltrechts beschäftigt. Während ihres Referendariats absolvierte sie Stationen u.a. im Bundesministerium für Umwelt, einer internationalen Kanzlei in London und der Ständigen Vertretung Deutschlands bei den Vereinten Nationen in Genf. Sie legte ihr Zweites Staatsexamen 2009 ab. Seit 2011 arbeitet sie als Rechtsanwältin in einer internationalen Rechtsanwaltskanzlei im Schieds- und Prozessrecht. Sie wurde 2014 von der Universität Frankfurt am Main promoviert.
IntroductionContemporary Investment Law - Outline of Methodological Approach1. Environmental Norms and Principles>Environment< as a Concept - Development of Environmental Regulation - Subject Areas of Environmental Law - Fundamental Principles of Environmental Law - Scenarios of Potential Conflict - Conclusion2. The Influence of Environmental Concepts on the Interpretation of Investment ProvisionsConflicts of Norms and Interpretation - Preambular Clauses - References within the Substantive Provisions of the Respective Treaties - Further Points of Entry for Relevant Rules of International Law - Conclusion3. Standards of Non-Discriminatory TreatmentNational Treatment - Most-Favoured Nation Treatment - Prohibition against Arbitrary and Discriminatory Measures - The Environmental Relevance of Standards of Non-Discrimination - Summary4. Standards of Fair TreatmentFull Protection and Security - Fair and Equitable Treatment - Analysis of Case Law Concerning Environmental Measures - Prohibition against Arbitrary or Unreasonable Measures - The Environmental Relevance of Standards of Fairness - Summary5. ExpropriationDirect Expropriation - Indirect Expropriation - Analysis of Case Law Concerning Environmental Measures - Expropriation in the Environmental Context - Application of Criteria to Different Scenarios - Compensation - ConclusionConclusionBibliographyTable of DecisionsTable of Treaties and Other International InstrumentsSubject Index