
Today, Investor-state Arbitration Embodies The Worst Fears Of Those Concerned About Runaway Globalization - A Far Cry From Its Framers' Intentions. Why Did Governments Create A Special Legal System In Which Foreign Investors Can Bring Cases Directly Against States? This Book Takes Readers Through The Key Decisions That Created Investor-state Arbitration, Drawing On Internal Documents From Several Governments And Extensive Interviews To Illustrate The Politics Behind This New Legal System. The Corporations And Law Firms That Dominate Investor-state Arbitration Today Were Not Present At Its Creation. In Fact, There Was Almost No Lobbying From Investors. Nor Did Powerful States Have A Strong Preference For It. Nor Was It Created Because There Was Evidence That It Facilitates Investment - There Was No Such Evidence. International Officials With Peacebuilding And Development Aims Drove The Rise Of Investor-state Arbitration. This Book Puts Forward A New Historical Institutionalist Explanation To Illuminate How The Actions Of These Officials Kicked Off A Process Of Gradual Institutional Development. While These Officials Anticipated Many Developments, Including An Enormous Caseload From Investment Treaties, Over Time This Institutional Framework They Created Has Been Put To New Purposes By Different Actors. Institutions Do Not Determine The Purposes To Which They May Be Put, And This Book's Analysis Illustrates How Unintended Consequences Emerge And Why Institutions Persist Regardless.
This book investigates the historical origins of investor-state arbitration to explain why governments established a legal system allowing foreign investors to sue states directly. Taylor St John, a scholar in international political economy, utilizes a historical institutionalist framework to analyze how international officials, rather than corporate lobbyists or powerful states, initiated this system. The text argues that the current state of arbitration is the result of unintended consequences and gradual institutional development rather than a deliberate design by the actors who dominate the field today.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of international institutional development and the political origins of global legal regimes. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the research and the clarity with which the author challenges common assumptions about the influence of corporate lobbying in international law.
Page Count:
2956
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192507249
ISBN-13:
9780192507242
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