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This collection critically discusses the increasing significance of
Asian States in the field of international investment law and
policy. Consisting of contributions authored by a leading team of
scholars and practitioners of international investment law, this
volume contains analyses of both national and multilateral
investment law rule-making in Asia, including a critical discussion
of certain States' approaches to balancing the different tension
between investment protection and the preservation of States'
regulatory sovereignty. It also contains thematic chapters on
cutting-edge developments which are of relevance to Asia as well as
the global community, such as investors' obligations of due
diligence, additional transparency in treaty-based investment
arbitration responses by ASEAN member States to transboundary haze
pollution, and the relevance of human rights obligations in
international investment law. It also contemplates future
possibilities for investor-State dispute settlement, including the
use of investor-State mediation in view of the Singapore Convention
on Mediation.
The proliferation of international courts and tribunals has given
rise to several new issues affecting the administration of
international justice. This book makes a significant contribution
to understanding the impact of this proliferation by addressing one
important question: namely, whether international courts and
tribunals are increasingly adopting common approaches to issues of
procedure and remedies. This book's central argument is that there
is an increasing commonality in the practice of international
courts to the application of rules concerning these issues, and
that this represents the emergence of a common law of international
adjudication.
The book examines this question by considering several key issues
relating to procedure and remedies, and analyzes relevant
international jurisprudence to demonstrate that there is
substantial commonality. It goes on to look at why international
courts are increasingly adopting common approaches to such
questions, and why a greater degree of commonality may be found
with respect to some issues rather than others. In doing so, light
is shed on the methods adopted by international courts to engage in
the cross-fertilization of legal principles.
The emergence of a common law of international adjudication has
important practical and theoretical implications, as it suggests
that international courts can also devise common approaches to the
challenges that they face in the age of proliferation. It also
suggests that international courts do not generally operate as
self-contained regimes, but rather that they regard themselves as
forming part of a community of international courts, therefore
having positive implications for thedevelopment of the
international legal system.
International investment law is in a state of evolution. With the
advent of investor-State arbitration in the latter part of the
twentieth century - and its exponential growth over the last decade
- new levels of complexity, uncertainty and substantive expansion
are emerging. States continue to enter into investment treaties and
the number of investor-State arbitration claims continues to rise.
At the same time, the various participants in investment treaty
arbitration are faced with increasingly difficult issues concerning
the fundamental character of the investment treaty regime, the role
of the actors in international investment law, the new significance
of procedure in the settlement of disputes and the emergence of
cross-cutting issues. Bringing together established scholars and
practitioners, as well as members of a new generation of
international investment lawyers, this volume examines these
developments and provides a balanced assessment of the challenges
being faced in the field.
A LONG-OUT-OF-PRINT CLASIC BY A MASTER OF UNDERGROUND COMICS In the
late 1980s, the idiosyncratic Chester Brown (author of the
muchlauded Paying for It and Louis Riel) began writing the cult
classic comic book series Yummy Fur. Within its pages, he
serialized the groundbreaking Ed the Happy Clown, revealing a
macabre universe of parallel dimensions. Thanks to its wholly
original yet disturbing story lines, Ed set the stage for Brown to
become a world-renowned cartoonist. Ed the Happy Clown is a
hallucinatory tale that functions simultaneously as a dark
roller-coaster ride of criminal activity and a scathing
condemnation of religious and political charlatanism. As the world
around him devolves into madness, the eponymous Ed escapes
variously from a jealous boyfriend, sewer monsters, the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police, and a janitor with a Jesus complex. Brown
leaves us wondering, with every twist of the plot, just how Ed will
get out of this scrape. The intimate, tangled world of Ed the Happy
Clown is definitively presented here, repackaged with a new
foreword by the author and an extensive notes section, and is, like
every Brown book, astonishingly perceptive about the zeitgeist of
its time.
The iconoclastic and bestselling cartoonist of Paying for It: A
Comic-Strip Memoir About Being a John returns with a polemical
interpretation of the Bible that will be one of the most
controversial and talked-about graphic novels of 2016. Mary Wepte
over the feet of Jesus is the retelling in comics from of nine
biblical stories that present Chester Brown's fascinating and
starling thesis about biblical representations of prostitution.
Brown weaves a connecting line between Bathsheba, Ruth, Rahab,
Tamar, Mary of Bethany, and he Birgin Mother and the reassesses the
Christian moral code by examining the cultural implications of the
Bible's representations of sex work. Mary Wept over the Feet of
Jesus is a fitting follow-up to Brown's sui generis graphic memoir
Paying for It, which was reviewed twice in the New York Times and
hailed by sex workers for Brown's advocacy for the
decriminalization and normalization of prostitution. Brown
approaches the Bible as he did the life of Louis Riel, making these
stories compellingly readable and utterly pertinent to a modern
audience. In classic Chester Brown fashion, he provides extensive
handwritten endnotes that delve into the biblical lore that informs
Mary Wept over the feet of Jesus. 'There aren't many cartoonists as
brave - or frankly, as strange - as this Canadian artist.' -
Rolling Stone.
Recent years have seen a proliferation of international courts and
tribunals, which has given rise to several new issues affecting the
administration of international justice. This book makes a
signification contribution to understanding the impact of this
proliferation by addressing one important question: namely, whether
international courts and tribunals are increasingly adopting common
approaches to issues of procedure and remedies. This book's central
argument is that there is an increasing commonality in the practice
of international courts to the application of rules concerning
these issues, and that this represents the emergence of a common
law of international adjudication.
This book examines this question by considering several key issues
relating to procedure and remedies, and analyzes relevant
international jurisprudence to demonstrate that there is
susbstantial commonality. It goes on to look at why international
courts are increasingly adopting common approaches to such
questions, and why a greater degree of commonality may be found
with respect to some issues rather than others. In doing so, light
is shed on the methods adopted by international courts to engage in
the cross-fertilization of legal principles.
The emergence of a common law of international adjudication has
important practical and theoretical implications, as it suggests
that international courts can also devise common approaches to the
challenges that they face in the age of proliferation. It also
suggests that international courts do not generally operate as
self-contained regimes, but rather that they regard themselves as
forming part of a community of international courts, therefore
having positive implications for the development of an truly
international legal system.
The existing literature on the substantive and procedural aspects
of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) relies heavily on
investment treaty arbitration decisions as a source of law. What is
missing is a comprehensive, analytical review of state practice.
This volume fills this gap, providing detailed analyses of the
investment treaty policy and practice of nineteen leading
capital-exporting states and emerging market economies. The authors
are leading experts in government, academia, and private legal
practice, and their chapters are largely based on primary source
materials. Each chapter provides a description of the regulatory or
policy framework governing foreign investment (both inflows and
outflows) with a historical presentation of the state's Model BIT;
an examination of internal government processes and practices
relating to treaty negotiation, conclusion, ratification and
record-keeping; and a detailed article-by-article analytical
commentary of the state's Model BIT, elucidating the policy behind
each provision and highlighting the ways in which the actual
investment treaty practice of that state deviates from this
standard text. This commentary is supplemented by the case law
relevant to that state's investment treaties. This commentary will
be of immense assistance to counsel and arbitrators engaged in
arguing and determining the proper interpretation of BITs and
investment chapters in Free Trade Agreements, and to government
officials and scholars engaged in BIT policy formulation and
implementation. It will serve as a standard resource for legal
practitioners, scholars, policy-makers and other stakeholders in
the field of international investment policy, law, and arbitration.
A memoir of shocking honesty by the graphic novelist behind 2011's
acclaimed comic "Paying for It"
As with every Chester Brown book, "The Playboy"--originally
published in 1992--was ahead of its time, illustrating the
fearlessness and prescience of the iconoclastic cartoonist. A
memoir about Brown's adolescent sexuality and shame, "The Playboy"
chronicles his teenage obsession with the magazine of the same
name, but it's also a work that explores the physical form of
comics to their fullest storytelling capacity. In it, a
fifteen-year-old Chester is visited by a time-traveling adult
Chester, and the latter narrates the former's compulsion to
purchase each issue of "Playboy" as it appears on newsstands. Even
more fascinating than his obsession with the magazine is his need
to keep his habit secret and the resulting lengths to which he goes
to avoid detection by his family and, later, his girlfriends.
The comics that became "The Playboy" first appeared in issues of
Brown's controversial, groundbreaking comic "Yummy Fur" more than
twenty years ago, and yet the frankness of the work makes it seem
avant-garde even now. As in every work by this master cartoonist,
"The Playboy" uses no extra words, no extra panels, no extra lines,
conveying environment and emotion through perfectly chosen moments.
Fans of his acclaimed and controversial memoir "Paying for It" are
sure to be drawn in by this early autobiographical portrait of
blazing honesty. The expanded reissue includes all-new appendixes
and notes from the author.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ History Of The Shepard Family Chester Brown Brown, 1894
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