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This is the long-awaited second edition of this widely-referenced
work on the substantive law principles of investment treaty
arbitration. It forms a detailed critical review of the substantive
principles of international law applied by investment arbitration
tribunals, and a clear and comprehensive description of the present
state of the law. The first edition met with immediate success as a
result of the authors' achievement in describing and analysing the
volume of law created, applied and analysed by tribunals. The
second edition is fully updated to take account of the arbitration
awards rendered in the period since 2007. Written by an
internationally recognised author team, it is now the most
comprehensive and up to date work in its field and no practitioner
or academic can afford to be without it. Key areas of coverage
include: the instruments under which investment disputes arise; the
legal basis of treaty arbitration; dispute resolution and parallel
proceedings; who is a foreign investor, including nationality
issues and foreign control; what is an investment; investors'
substantive rights, including fair and equitable treatment;
expropriation; compensation and remedies. Arbitration of overseas
investment disputes is one of the fastest growing areas of
international dispute resolution. The exponential growth of
international investment in recent years has led to the signature
of over two thousand Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) between
foreign states, in addition to a wealth of multilateral treaties
and other forms of concession agreements. The legal principles that
have developed in this area are subject to intense debate, and are
still in a state of flux. While tribunals routinely state that they
are applying principles of public international law to determine
disputes, many of the principles applied have only been developed
recently in the context of investment treaty arbitrations, and
tribunals are often guided more by the approaches taken by other
tribunals, than by pre-existing doctrines of public international
law. International Investment Arbitration:Substantive Principles is
an important contribution to the collection and codification of the
current state of practice in this field.
Studying the changing strategies used by the nineteenth-century
southern leaders to justify their direction of the South's economy
and politics, Shore shows how leaders before, during, and after the
Civil War attempted to set standards of success in southern society
and to clarify the relations between those standards and national
prosperity. Shore offers a new perspective on southern leaders'
worldview and helps clarify the enduring question of what is new
about the "new South."
Originally published in 1986.
A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the
latest in digital technology to make available again books from our
distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These
editions are published unaltered from the original, and are
presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both
historical and cultural value.
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