Now available as
eBook
Sustainable development, as defined by the World Commission on Environment and
Development, is “development that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” More
specifically, sustainable development is a process of change that seeks to
improve the collective quality of life by focusing on economically, socially,
and environmentally sound projects that are viable in the long-term.
Sustainable development requires structural economic change and the foundation
of that change is investment. In developing nations with low levels of
domestic savings, investment predictably comes from abroad in the form of
foreign direct investment. A large and ever expanding number of international
investment agreements are in place to govern these transactions. While these
accords seek to foster development while mitigating the risk involved in these
types investments, many questions remain unresolved.
This highly insightful book reflects the contributions of a variety of world
renowned experts each of which is designed to provide the reader with valuable
perspective on recent developments in investment law negotiations and
jurisprudence from a sustainable development law perspective. It offers
answers to pertinent questions concerning advancements in investment law,
including the negotiation of numerous regional and bilateral agreements as
well as the increasing number of disputes resolved in the World Bank’s
International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), from
different developed and developing country perspectives. It lays out future
directions for new treaty negotiations and dispute settlement proceedings, as
well as ongoing investment promotion efforts, against a background of rapidly
evolving international relationships between economic, environment and
development law. It focuses on key issues in investment laws which have
emerged as priorities in the negotiation of bilateral and regional investment
agreements, and have been clarified through recent decisions of the ICSID and
other arbitral panel awards.