PUBLIC STATEMENT ON THE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT REGIME
http://www.osgoode.yorku.ca/public_statement
PUBLIC STATEMENT ON THE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT REGIME
DÉCLARATION PUBLIQUE SUR LE RÉGIME D'INVESTISSEMENT INTERNATIONAL
DECLARACIÓN PÚBLICA SOBRE EL RÉGIMEN DE INVERSIÓN INTERNACIONAL
DECLARAÇÕA PÚBLICA
关于国际投资体制的公共声明
ОТКРЫТОЕ ЗАЯВЛЕНИЕ О МЕЖДУНАРОДНОМ ИНВЕСТИЦИОННОМ РЕЖИМЕ
PUBLIC STATEMENT ON THE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT REGIME (VAI VERSION)
IMPORTANT NOTE: The statement reflects the opinions of its individual supporters and should not be attributed to any organization or institution with which each is affiliated. It does not represent legal or other professional advice of any kind.
English version (HTML):
PUBLIC STATEMENT
ON THE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT REGIME
31 August 2010
We have a shared concern for the harm done to the public welfare by the international investment regime, as currently structured, especially its hampering of the ability of governments to act for their people in response to the concerns of human development and environmental sustainability.
WE AGREE THAT:
General principles
- The protection of investors, and by extension the use of investment law and arbitration, is a means to the end of advancing the public welfare and must not be treated as an end in itself.
- All investors, regardless of nationality, should have access to an open and independent judicial system for the resolution of disputes, including disputes with government.
- Foreign investment may have harmful as well as beneficial impacts on society and it is the responsibility of any government to encourage the beneficial while limiting the harmful.
- States have a fundamental right to regulate on behalf of the public welfare and this right must not be subordinated to the interests of investors where the right to regulate is exercised in good faith and for a legitimate purpose.
Pro-investor interpretations of investment treaties
- Awards issued by international arbitrators against states have in numerous cases incorporated overly expansive interpretations of language in investment treaties. These interpretations have prioritized the protection of the property and economic interests of transnational corporations over the right to regulate of states and the right to self-determination of peoples. This is especially evident in the approach adopted by many arbitration tribunals to investment treaty concepts of corporate nationality, expropriation, most-favoured-nation treatment, non-discrimination, and fair and equitable treatment, all of which have been given unduly pro-investor interpretations at the expense of states, their governments, and those on whose behalf they act. This has constituted a major reorientation of the balance between investor protection and public regulation in international law.
- The award of damages as a remedy of first resort in investment arbitration poses a serious threat to democratic choice and the capacity of governments to act in the public interest by way of innovative policy-making in response to changing social, economic, and environmental conditions.
- The primary legal framework for the regulation of investor-state relations is domestic law.
- Investment treaty arbitration as currently constituted is not a fair, independent, and balanced method for the resolution of investment disputes and therefore should not be relied on for this purpose. There is a strong moral as well as policy case for governments to withdraw from investment treaties and to oppose investor-state arbitration, including by refusal to pay arbitration awards against them where an award for compensation has followed from a good faith measure that was introduced for a legitimate purpose.
- Private citizens, local communities and civil society organizations should be afforded a right to participate in decision-making that affects their rights and interests, including in the context of investor-state dispute settlement or contract renegotiation. The international investment regime, by not allowing for full and equal participation of such parties alongside the investor where their interests are affected, fails to satisfy this basic requirement of procedural fairness.
- Although not without flaws, investment contracts are preferable to investment treaties as a legal mechanism to supplement domestic law in the regulation of investor-state relations because they allow for greater care to be taken and greater certainty to be achieved in the framing of the parties’ legal rights and obligations. This is only so, however, if the investment contract precludes resort by either the investor or the state to an investment treaty claim so as to permit it to avoid its contractual commitments, including commitments on dispute settlement and choice of law.
- Investment contracts should be concluded and implemented in accordance with the principles of public accountability and openness and should preserve the state’s right to regulate in good faith and for a legitimate purpose.
- Investment contracts should provide a mechanism for managed renegotiation by the investor and state, based on a fair and balanced process in which adequate support and resourcing is available to both parties, so as to accommodate significant changes in the circumstances of the underlying agreement.
- Proposals to conclude a multilateral investment agreement or to restate international investment law based on recent arbitration awards are misguided because they risk entrenching and legitimizing an international investment regime that lacks fairness and balance, including basic requirements of openness and judicial independence.
- States should review their investment treaties with a view to withdrawing from or renegotiating them in light of the concerns expressed above; should take steps to replace or curtail the use of investment treaty arbitration; and should strengthen their domestic justice system for the benefit of all citizens and communities, including investors.
- International organizations should refrain from promoting investment treaties and should conduct research and make recommendations on the serious risks posed to governments by investment treaty arbitration; on preferred alternatives to investment treaty arbitration including private risk insurance and contract-based arbitration; and on strategies for states to pursue withdrawal from or renegotiation of their investment treaties.
- The international business community should refrain from promoting the international investment regime and from resorting to investment treaty arbitration. Instead, it should promote fair and balanced adjudicative processes that satisfy the requirements of openness and judicial independence in accordance with the principles of procedural fairness and the rule of law. The international business community should also seek to resolve disputes in a co-operative spirit with recourse to adjudication only as a last resort.
- Civil society should continue to take steps to inform its constituents and society at large of the failures of and threats posed by the international investment regime and to oppose the application of that regime to governments that undertake legislative or general policy measures for legitimate purposes.
Gus Van Harten Associate Professor of Law Osgoode Hall Law School | David Schneiderman Professor of Law and Political Science University of Toronto |
Muthucumaraswamy Sornarajah Professor of Law National University of Singapore | Peter Muchlinski Professor of Law University of London (SOAS) |
Sol Picciotto Emeritus Professor of Law Lancaster University | Craig Scott Professor of Law Osgoode Hall Law School |
Kyla Tienhaara Research Fellow in Environmental Governance Australian National University | Obiora Okafor Professor of Law Osgoode Hall Law School |
Stepan Wood Professor of Law Osgoode Hall Law School | Amanda Perry-Kessaris Professor of Law University of London (SOAS) |
Kevin Gallagher Associate Professor of International Relations Boston University | Margot Salomon Senior Lecturer in Law London School of Economics |
A. Claire Cutler Professor of International Law and International Relations University of Victoria | Martin Loughlin Professor of Public Law London School of Economics |
Barnali Choudhury Assistant Professor in Law McGill University | Saskia Sassen Professor of Sociology Columbia University |
Jennifer Clapp Professor of Environmental Studies University of Waterloo | Tom Faunce Associate Professor of Law Australian National University |
Peter Drahos Professor of Law Australian National University | Peter Newell Professor of International Development University of East Anglia |
Sheldon Leader Professor of Law University of Essex | Anne Orford Professor of International Law University of Melbourne |
Julio Faundez Professor of Law University of Warwick | Paddy Ireland Professor of Law University of Kent |
Emma Aisbett Research Fellow in Economics Australian National University | Jonathan Klaaren Professor of Law University of the Witwatersrand |
James Gathii Professor of International Commercial Law Albany Law School | Ken Shadlen Reader in Development Studies London School of Economics |
John Braithwaite Federation Fellow in Regulatory Institutions Australian National University | Harry Arthurs Professor of Law Osgoode Hall Law School |
Stephen Clarkson Professor of Political Science University of Toronto | Ruth Buchanan Associate Professor of Law Osgoode Hall Law School |
Martti Koskenniemi Professor of International Law University of Helsinki | Nico Krisch Professor of International Law Hertie School of Governance |
Markus Krajewski Guest Professor of Law University of Bremen | Penelope Simons Associate Professor of Law University of Ottawa |
Lawan Thanadsillapakul Professor of Law Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University | Graham Mayeda Associate Professor of Law University of Ottawa |
Cai Congyan Professor of International Law Xiamen University | Liu Sun Professor Zhongnan University of Economics and Law |
Joachim Spangenberg Research Coordinator Sustainable Europe Research Institute | Daniel D. Bradlow Professor of International Development Law and African Economic Relations University of Pretoria |
Xiuli Han Associate Professor of International Law Xiamen University | Christian Bellak Associate Professor of Economics University of Vienna |
Audrey Macklin Professor of Law University of Toronto | Eva Paus Professor of Economics Mount Holyoke College |
Stephen McBride Professor of Political Science McMaster University | Jane Kelsey Professor of Law University of Auckland |
Leonardo E. Stanley Associate Researcher Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad | Carolina Olarte B. Professor of International Law Pontificia Universidad Javeriana de Bogotá |
Rhys Jenkins Professor of Development Economics University of East Anglia | Ricardo Grinspun Associate Professor of Economics York University |
Wolfgang Voegeli Professor of International Studies University of Hamburg | |
Gus Van Harten Associate Professor Osgoode Hall Law School York University 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON Canada M3J 1P3 +1 416 650 8419 (tel) gvanharten@osgoode.yorku.ca | David Schneiderman Professor of Law and Political Science Faculty of Law University of Toronto 78 Queen’s Park, Toronto, ON Canada M5S 2C5 +1 416 978 2677 (tel) david.schneiderman@utoronto.ca |
BACKGROUND NOTE
This statement emerges from discussions during a visit by Professor M. Sornarajah to Osgoode Hall Law School of York University in Toronto, Canada, and at a workshop on the adjudication of international economic disputes held at the Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law.
The statement was motivated by a concern that we are at an important juncture for the international investment regime in light of upcoming meetings and ongoing processes on investment law and arbitration. These include:
- European Union processes to develop a common investment policy that could consolidate or supercede hundreds of bilateral investment treaties.
- Negotiations toward a Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement on investment;
- Possible renewed negotiations on investment at the World Trade Organization, especially in relation to trade disciplines under the General Agreement on Trade in Services;
- Regional initiatives to reform investment law and arbitration, especially in Latin America;
- Reviews by states of their domestic policy on investment law and arbitration;
- Revisions of their arbitration rules, as they involve states, by the UN Commission on International Trade Law and by the International Chamber of Commerce;
- Upcoming meetings of the UN Conference on Trade and Development and other organizations that will address investment treaties.
The aim of this statement is to bring the concerns expressed above to the attention of decision-makers and the public in general