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Assessing the extent to which armed conflict impacts the
obligations that states have towards foreign investors and their
investments under international investment treaties requires
considering a wide range of issues, many of which are systemic in
nature. These include substantive and procedural topics, not only
with regard to international investment law, but also concerning
the law on the use of force, international humanitarian law and
human rights law, the law of treaties, the law of state
responsibility and the law of state succession.This volume provides
an in-depth assessment of the overlap between international
investment law and the law of armed conflict by charting the
terrain of the multifaceted and complex relationship between these
two fields of public international law, fostering debate and
offering novel perspectives on the matter.
This open access book focuses on public actors with a role in the
settlement of investment disputes. Traditional studies on actors in
international investment law have tended to concentrate on
arbitrators, claimant investors and respondent states. Yet this
focus on the "principal" players in investment dispute settlement
has allowed a number of other seminal actors to be neglected. This
book seeks to redress this imbalance by turning the spotlight on
the latter. From the investor's home state to domestic courts, from
sub-national governments to international organisations, and from
political risk insurance agencies to legal defence teams in
national ministries, the book critically reviews these overlooked
public actors in international investment law.
The Parthenon marbles case is the most famous international
cultural heritage dispute concerning repatriation of looted
antiquities, the Parthenon marbles in the British Museum’s
‘Elgin Collection’. The case has polarised observers ever since
Elgin had the marbles hacked out of the ancient temple at the turn
of the 19th century in Ottoman-occupied Athens. In 1816, a
debt-stricken Elgin sold the marbles to the British government,
which subsequently entrusted them to the British Museum, where they
have remained since then. Much ink has been spilled on the
Parthenon marbles. The ethical and cultural merits of their
repatriation have been fiercely debated for years. But what has
generally not been considered are the legal merits of their return
in light of contemporary international law. This book is the first
in legal scholarship to provide an international law perspective of
the cause célèbre of international cultural heritage disputes
and, in doing so, to clarify the new customary international law on
the return of cultural property unlawfully removed from its
original context. The book, which includes a foreword by
Andrew Wallace-Hadrill, is a unique reference work on the
legal case for the return of the Parthenon marbles and the new
normative framework for the protection of cultural heritage.
This EYIEL special issue examines the interaction between
international investment law and competition law. Although issues
related to both international investment law and competition law
arise regularly in international legal practice and are examined
together, scholarly analysis largely treats them as parallel
universes. As a result their actual and potential overlap has yet
to be sufficiently explored. In this light, International
Investment Law and Competition Law discusses a variety of topics at
the intersection of investment and competition, including the
interaction between competition-related provisions and investment
protection standards in free trade agreements; investors'
anti-competitive behaviour and illegal investments; state aid
schemes and foreign investors' legitimate expectations; EU member
States' compliance with investment awards as (illegal) state aid
under EU law; State-owned enterprises and competitive neutrality;
and interactions between public procurement, investment and
competition law.
This book provides a systematic and comprehensive study of the
legal concept of equity as it operates in contemporary
international law. A principle with a long pedigree, equity has
been present in legal thought and in municipal legal systems since
antiquity. Introduced in international legal decisions through
claims commissions and arbitral tribunals, equity became
progressively part and parcel of the international law mainstream.
From international cultural heritage law to the law on climate
change, from maritime boundary delimitations to decisions on
security for costs in investment arbitration, the relevance of
equity is more far-reaching than has previously been acknowledged.
In contrast with earlier studies on the topic, this book is
informed by a body of judicial and arbitral case law that has never
been so substantial and varied. It also draws extensively on the
prolific case law of investment tribunals, gaining insights from a
valuable source that is typically overlooked in public
international law scholarship. As the importance of international
law increases, covering continuously new domains, the value of
equity increases with it. It is this new equity in the
international law of the 21st century that this book explores.
Until now, the resolution of international commercial and
investment disputes has been dominated almost exclusively by
international arbitration. But that is changing. Whilst they may be
complementary mechanisms, international mediation and conciliation
are now coming to the fore. Mediation rules that were in disuse
gather momentum, and dispute settlement centres are introducing new
mediation rules. The European Union is encouraging international
mediation in both the commercial and investment spheres. The 2019
Singapore Mediation Convention of the United Nations Commission on
International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) is aiming to ensure enforcement
of international commercial settlement agreements resulting from
mediation. The first investor-State disputes are mediated under the
International Bar Association (IBA) rules. The International Centre
for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID)'s conciliation
mechanism is resorted to more often than in the past. The
International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has recently administered
its first mediation case based on a bilateral investment treaty,
and a new training market on mediation is flourishing. Mediation in
Commercial and Investment Disputes brings together a line-up of
outstanding, highly-qualified experts from academia, mediation and
arbitration institutions, and international legal practice, to
address this highly topical, complex subject from a variety of
angles.
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