INTRODUCTION
This module introduces students International Investment Law. The course aims to provide students with a theoretical and practical understanding of international investment law, particularly the regime governing protection and implementation of foreign investments. The course explains various frameworks established by national laws and rules of international law governing cross-border or international investments and how they operate in practice. The major focus of the course is to examine whether the rules of international investment law reconcile the protection of foreign investment with the host State’s right to regulate.
OBJECTIVES
The objectives of the module are:
LEARNING OUTCOMES
At the end of this module you should be able to:
UNIT 1 – INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT LAW: VARIOUS AREAS AND VARIOUS REGIMES
UNIT 2 – APPLICATION OF GENERAL INTERNATIONAL LAW TO FOREIGN INVESTMENT
UNIT 3 – THE CONDUCT OF HOSTILITIES
UNIT 4 – PROTECTION OF FOREIGN INVESTMENT: SCOPE OF APPLICABLE TREATIES
UNIT 5 – EXPROPRIATION
UNIT 6 – STANDARDS OF TREATMENT (II): NATIONAL TREATEMENT & MOST FAVOURED NATIONAL TREATEMENT
UNIT 7 – SETLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES (I): FORA
UNIT 8 – SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES (I): PROCEDURE
RECOMMENDED READING
Douglas Z. (2003). The Hybrid Foundations of Investment Treaty Arbitration. British Yearbook of International Law, Volume 74, Issue 1.
Elimination of TRIMS: The Experience of Selected Developing Countries, UNCTAD, 2007
Paparinskis M. (2013) The International Minimum Standard and Fair and Equitable Treatment. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Paulsson J. (1995) Arbitration Without Privity // ICSID Review – Foreign Investment Law Journal, Volume 10, Issue 2.
Kaufmann-Kohler G., Potesta M. (2016). Can the Mauritius Convention Serve as a Model of Investor-State Arbitration in Connection with the Introduction of a Permanent Investment Tribunal or an Appeal Mechanism, available at http://www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/CIDS_Research_Paper_Mauritius.pdf.