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The global crises of the early 21st century have tested the international financial architecture. In seeking to ensure stability, governments have regulated financial and capital markets. This in turn has implicated international investment law, which investors have invoked as a shield against debt restructuring, bail-ins or bail-outs. This book explores whether investment law should protect against such regulatory measures, including where these have the support of multilateral institutions. It considers where the line should be drawn between legitimate regulation and undue interference with investor rights and, equally importantly, who draws it. Across the diverse chapters herein, expert international scholars assess the key challenges facing decision makers, analyze arbitral and treaty practice and evaluate ways towards a balanced system of investment protection in the financial sector. In doing so, they offer a detailed analysis of the interaction between investment protection and financial regulation in fields such as sovereign debt restructuring and bank rescue measures. Combining high-level analysis with a detailed assessment of controversial legal issues, this book will provide guidance for both academics and legal practitioners working in international economic law, international arbitration, investment law, international banking and financial law.Contributors include: A. Asteriti, P. Athanassiou, C.N. Brower, A. De Luca, A. Goetz-Charlier, M. Goldmann, A. Gourgourinis, R. Hofmann, H. Kupelyants, Y. Li, M. Mendelson, M.W. Müller, C. Ohler, M. Paparinskis, P. Ranjan, S.W. Schill, M. Sudreau, C.J. Tams
Edited by Christian J. Tams, Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London, UK, Stephan W. Schill, Professor of International and Economic Law and Governance, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands and Rainer Hofmann, Professor of Public Law, Public International Law and European Law, University of Frankfurt, Germany
Contents:Part I Overarching Perspectives 1. International Investment Law and the Global Financial Architecture: Identifying Linkages, Mapping Interactions Christian J. Tams, Stephan W. Schill and Rainer Hofmann2. International Investment Arbitration and the Global Financial System: Are They ‘Yin’ and ‘Yang’ or Like Oil and Water? Charles N. Brower and Alexandra Goetz-Charlier3. International Investment Law and Financial Regulation: Towards a Deliberative ApproachMatthias GoldmannPart II Sovereign Debt Restructurings4. Police Powers of the State in Sovereign Debt RestructuringsHayk Kupelyants5. Restructuring Sovereign Debt on the Basis of Collective Action Clauses Christoph Ohler6. Sovereign Bond Disputes Before Investment Treaty Tribunals: Safeguarding the Exercise of Collective Action Clauses With a Single-Limb Voting Mechanism Yanying Li7. Bilateral Investment Treaties and the Principles on Responsible Sovereign Lending and Borrowing: Working Together Towards the Provision of an International Legal Framework Addressing Sovereign Debt Issues? Marie SudreauPart III Bank Rescue Measures8. Bail-Ins and International Investment Law: In and Beyond Cyprus Maurice Mendelson QC and Martins Paparinskis9. Bank Rescue Measures Under International Investment Law: What Role for the Principle Of Causation?Anna De Luca10. BITs and Pieces: Reflections on the Relevance of BITs in Resolution-Related LitigationPhoebus AthanassiouPart IV Alternative Claims and Defences, New Actors11. Capital-Flow Management Measures and International Investment Law – Never the Twain Shall Meet? Prabhash Ranjan12. Crisis as Force Majeure Under International Law and Eu Law: Defending Emergency Measures, À La Européenne, In Investment Arbitration Under Intra-EU BITsAnastasios Gourgourinis13. International Financial Institutions in Investment Law and ArbitrationMichael Wolfgang MüllerIndex
'This book closes a serious gap in the writings on international investment law. It explores the complex relationship between investment law and international finance, dealing with sovereign debt restructuring, bank rescues, monetary transfers and related topics. In doing so, it addresses the competing goals and divergent methodologies of the two fields and the potential tension between investment protection and broader macroeconomic concerns. A must in every library on international investment law and international finance.'
SCHILL, Schill, Stephan W. Schill, Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law) Schill, Stephan W. (Attorney-at-Law (New York); Senior Research Fellow
David D. Caron, Stephan W. Schill, Abby Cohen Smutny, Epaminontas E. Triantafilou, King's College London) Caron, David D. (Dean, The Dickson Poon School of Law, Dean, The Dickson Poon School of Law, University of Amsterdam) Schill, Stephan W. (Professor of International Economic Law and Governance, Professor of International Economic Law and Governance, White & Case LLP) Cohen Smutny, Abby (Partner, Partner, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP) Triantafilou, Epaminontas E. (Of Counsel, Of Counsel, David D Caron, Stephan W Schill, Epaminontas E Triantafilou