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Investment Treaty Arbitration and Public Law / Gus Van Harten

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New york Oxford University Press 2007Description: xxxii, 214p. : ill. ; 24cmISBN:
  • 9780199552146
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23rd 346.07 VAN
Online resources:
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Reference Book VIT AP School of Law LAW Section Reference 346.07 VAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) LA01633 Not For Loan LAW 020485

It includes Bibliography and Index Pages.

Description:
The recent explosion of investment treaty arbitration marks a revolutionary change in both international and public law, above all because it demonstrates how states have unwittingly privatised key powers of the courts in public law.

This book outlines investment treaty arbitration as a public law system, by precisely demonstrating the significance of giving arbitrators comprehensive jurisdiction to decide regulatory disputes between business and state. In doing so, it exposes some startling consequences of transplanting rules of commercial arbitration into the regulatory sphere. First, private arbitrators can award compensation to investors in ways that go well beyond domestic systems of state liability in public law. Second, these awards can be enforced in as many as 165 countries, making them more widely enforceable than other judicial decisions in public law. Third, public law can be interpreted in private as a matter of course, without any appeal to a court to correct errors of law.

The conflict between private arbitration and public law poses a serious challenge to open and accountable judging. But the critical flaw of the system - hitherto neglected - is its threat to judicial independence based on security of tenure. Under investment treaties, business claims against the state are decided by privately contracted adjudicators, who win appointments only as more claims are brought. Thus, as the book explains, the 'judge' has a financial stake in how public law is interpreted and in the outcome of the dispute. While it is laudable to use international adjudication to resolve controversial disputes, the benefits of a global economy are no excuse for corrupting our historic tradition of independent courts.

Table of Contents

1:Introduction
2:Background
3:Individualization
4:Scope and Substance
5:Approaches and Interpretation
6:From Contract to Governing Arrangement
7:Conclusion

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