The recent explosion of investment treaty arbitration marks a major transformation of both international and public law, above all because of the manner in which states have delegated core powers of the courts to private arbitrators.
This book outlines investment treaty arbitration as a public law system and demonstrates how the system goes beyond all other forms of international adjudication in giving arbitrators a comprehensive jurisdiction to determine the legality of sovereign acts and to award public funds to businesses that sustain loss as a result of government regulation. The analysis also reveals some startling consequences of transplanting rules of commercial arbitration into the regulatory sphere. For instance, the system allows public law to be interpreted by arbitrators in private as a matter of course, with limited scope for judicial review. Further, arbitrators can award compensation to investors in ways that go beyond domestic systems of state liability, and these awards may then be enforced in as many as 165 countries, making them more widely enforceable than any other adjudicative decision in public law.
The system's mixture of private arbitration and public law undermines accountability and openness in judicial decision-making. But, most importantly, it poses a unique and fundamental challenge - hitherto neglected by other commentators - to the principle of judicial independence. To address this, this book argues that the system be replaced with an international investment court, properly constituted according to public law principles, and made up of tenured judges.
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Höhe: 241 mm
Breite: 164 mm
Dicke: 16 mm
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ISBN-13
978-0-19-921789-2 (9780199217892)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Gus Van Harten is Assistant Professor at the Osgoode Hall School of Law, York University, Canada. He previously taught International Law at the London School of Economics, where he obtained his PhD. He was educated in Canada at the University of Guelph, York University, and Osgoode Hall Law School. His work on investment treaties has appeared in the European Journal of International Law, the Yale Human Rights and Development Law Journal, and the Review of International Political Economy.
Autor*in
, Assistant Professor, Osgoode Hall School of Law, York University, Canada
1. Introduction ; 2. A Return to the Gay Nineties? ; 3. From Contract to Public Law ; 4. Scope and Standards of Review ; 5. The Transformation of International Law ; 6. Approaches and Interpretations ; 7. The Businessman's Court