From a Fortuitous Transplant to a Fundamental Principle of Law?

2021 ◽  
pp. 426-440
Author(s):  
Josef Ostřanský

The doctrine of legitimate expectations (LEs) is now considered a backbone principle of international investment law (IIL), particularly of the fair and equitable treatment standard (FET). Open any recent textbook of IIL and you will find discussion on LEs as one of the core principles. However, if one takes a step back, one may see that the notion of legitimate expectations simply appeared in early investment cases ‘out of thin air’. This contribution will argue that, while LEs’ appearance in IIL practice may be viewed as contingent, its ascendance into the principal doctrine of substantive IIL with specific parameters is neither entirely accidental nor random. The use and specific parameters of the doctrine have been allowed and facilitated by both the indeterminate and semantically ambiguous legal form of IIL obligations, and by a specific historical context in which the notion became prominent. The consequence of the argument can be appreciated at two levels. First, it can be argued that even without the contingent ascendance of the notion of LEs, the field of IIL would likely have taken up a similar substantive trajectory. Second, this argument sheds light on questions about how a more substantial change in the regime might be effected, instead of merely reforming certain aspects of the regime without affecting its current premises, structure, substance, and teleology. By doing so, the contribution underlines the difficulties in articulating plausibly what would have made a difference in a particular legal regime.

2020 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-255
Author(s):  
Yulia Levashova

Abstract The investor’s due diligence has become a significant factor in determining whether the legitimate expectations of an investor give rise to protection under the FET standard. This is especially relevant when an investor’s claim for the protection of its legitimate expectations is based on the stability of a regulatory framework. The investor’s due diligence in the context of the FET standard goes beyond the risk-based business due diligence performed by a foreign investor for its own benefit. It has implications for a state’s right to regulate in the public interest and a broader notion of business responsibilities. Investors are expected to conduct proper due diligence before investing in a host state by demonstrating their reasonable efforts to collect information about the rules and regulations that are pertinent to the proposed investment. In some cases, due diligence extends to an investor’s duty to assess the possible risks related to the broader economic situation and socio-political background of a host state. Focusing on the recent renewable energy awards, this article analyses and clarifies the role of due diligence in the context of the FET standard, as well as its potential application for asserting responsible business conduct in the broader framework of international investment law.


Author(s):  
Srilal M. Perera

In Part I of this two-part article the author examines the foundations for equity-based decision-making under international law and their relevance to resolving contemporary investment disputes based on the Fair and Equitable Treatment standard (FET standard). He contends that equity-based decision-making in the past has been rare, and in such instances adjudicators have been extremely restrained because of the propensity for subjective judgments. However, in the modern day application of equitable considerations in a large number of investments disputes before the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) seeking relief based on the FET standard, the decisions have mostly been inconsistent and conflicting, leading often to inexplicable and excessive remedies. In no other line of cases has this trend been more demonstrated than in the investment disputes following the Argentine economic crisis. They point more to the serious anomalies and omissions and interpretive issues in International Investment Agreements (mostly BITs) which require remedial measures if international investment law itself is to advance.


2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
JACOB STONE

AbstractOne of the most common features of international investment treaties is the obligation of a state to grant ‘fair and equitable treatment’ to investors and investments. Treatment giving rise to allegations of breaches of this obligation has taken many forms, namely bad faith, discrimination, denial of justice, frustration of legitimate expectations, lack of transparency, coercion and harassment, and arbitrariness or arbitrary conduct. This latter form of treatment – arbitrariness – has rarely been the focus of scholarly works and, thus, its scope and meaning are difficult to ascertain. When examined in the context of international investment disputes, however, one may conclude that, while its scope and meaning may vary, arbitrariness is indeed a legitimate basis for claim under the fair and equitable treatment standard. The thresholds for demonstrating arbitrariness, however, are decidedly and consistently high.


2021 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-51
Author(s):  
Katarina Maletić

The purpose of this paper is to answer the question whether investors may challenge domestic labour legislation by invoking breach of international investment agreements, in particular violations of fair and equitable treatment standard, as well as illegal expropriation of investments. The answer to this question is especially relevant for developing countries, such as the Republic of Serbia, which seek to harmonize their legal systems with international principles of labour rights protection. Therefore, the paper will explore the interpretations of the fair and equitable treatment standard and indirect expropriation given by arbitration tribunals and accepted among scholars, as well as their application with respect to the labour regulation changes. Particularly analysed is the relevant case law before arbitration tribunals dealing with the question whether host states may violate these standards by amending their domestic labour legislation. Research has shown that domestic labour regulation amendments may rarely be interpreted as indirect expropriation, while the fair and equitable treatment standard may be breached in case of unpredictable labour legislation changes which would significantly violate guarantees given by the state to attract foreign investments but cannot protect investors from the introduction of bona fide labour regulations.


Author(s):  
Laird Ian A ◽  
Sabahi Borzu ◽  
Sourgens Frédéric Gilles ◽  
Birch Nicholas J ◽  
Duggal Kabir

This chapter is organized into five sections, focusing on issues addressed by tribunals and courts in 2012 related to Jurisdiction, Merits, Compensation and Non-pecuniary Remedies, Procedure and Annulment, and Enforcement of Awards. Section A discusses the grounds for jurisdictional challenge by respondents. Section B provides a summary review of the merits decisions of the past year, showing that the fair and equitable treatment standard remains a primary basis for the awards of tribunals, with a resurgence of decisions by tribunals accepting that investments were expropriated without compensation. Section C reviews the eight awards in which compensation was granted in 2012. Section D addresses questions of procedure that arose in 2012. Finally, Section E reviews the two International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes ad hoc annulment committee decisions of the past year, plus a number of domestic court decisions regarding the enforcement of awards.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 240-264
Author(s):  
Robert Bradshaw

In the aftermath of the Achmea judgment and with the European Commission’s continued efforts to curtail investor- State arbitration, EU law and international investment law may seem antithetical. However, this article considers how EU law may contribute to the development of investment law through the concept of proportionality, a general principle of EU law and various national legal systems. Tribunals have increasingly applied a proportionality analysis in their reasoning, most recently in several cases brought by renewable energy investors against Spain and Italy under the Energy Charter Treaty. These cases concern the controversial issue of when a change in the regulatory framework violates investors’ legitimate expectations and their right to fair and equitable treatment. This article argues that the proportionality standard has the potential to clarify this area of law and to promote “defragmentation” between international investment law and other legal systems.


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