edited by Chester Brown
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.