Investment Treaties and the Legal Imagination: How Foreign Investors Play By Their Own Rules
Autor Nicolás M. Perroneen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 feb 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198862147
ISBN-10: 0198862148
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 165 x 241 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198862148
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 165 x 241 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
...The book rewards anyone interested in the genealogy of international environmental law with a more profound understanding of the discourse.
Perrone's account of this period is worth reading and reflecting up on, not only to understand the nexus of power and business interests that has dominated this (if not all) area/s of international law since the aftermath of Word War II, but to reflect on how, in international law especially, all is up for grabs, especially if you have the right credentials.
Perrone's new book is an innovative and timely contribution to the literature in the field and advances our understanding of the legal regime of investment treaties and arbitration. The book brings a much needed and refreshing perspective not only on the right to regulate debate but much beyond.
Perrone's book takes us to the brink of a new legal imagination, one in which foreign investors are no longer extraordinary, but rather embedded in communities and national contexts like other actors. The question now is: How do we get there?
Perrone's book offers stimulating insights into the history of investment protection and opens the door for future analyses at the intersection of business history and international law scholarship.
Perrone's book is an elegantly written account of both investment law's origin story and its contemporary practice. Taking a deep dive into the archives and the jurisprudence, readers learn that arbitral output today is fully faithful to the legal imagination of the regime's founding fathers. Like their predecessors, contemporary norm entrepreneurs elide engagement with local communities even as the regime moves to adopt a proceduralist, good governance, rationale. Inviting readers to rethink the investment law regime, Perrone offers a critical and timely intervention, conjoining the present with the past, with a view to imagining a different future for international law.
This timely book subverts the tradition by offering its own, meticulously researched and boldly argued, story of international investment law. Perrone unmasks the hidden figures whose legal and political imagination spawned the global regime of investment protection, unveiling the key drivers behind its creation and rapid expansion in the recent decades.
Nicolás Perrone's fascinating book explores the blueprint that had been made in the 1950s and 1960s for the setting up of a system of international investment protection. At a time when the reform of this system is being contemplated, this timely book calls our attention to the early thinking of a coalition of diverse leaders from business, law and finance, and to how arbitrators willingly carried out the ideas in the blueprint by building a legal superstructure through the interpretation of the investment treaties.
Perrone's account of this period is worth reading and reflecting up on, not only to understand the nexus of power and business interests that has dominated this (if not all) area/s of international law since the aftermath of Word War II, but to reflect on how, in international law especially, all is up for grabs, especially if you have the right credentials.
Perrone's new book is an innovative and timely contribution to the literature in the field and advances our understanding of the legal regime of investment treaties and arbitration. The book brings a much needed and refreshing perspective not only on the right to regulate debate but much beyond.
Perrone's book takes us to the brink of a new legal imagination, one in which foreign investors are no longer extraordinary, but rather embedded in communities and national contexts like other actors. The question now is: How do we get there?
Perrone's book offers stimulating insights into the history of investment protection and opens the door for future analyses at the intersection of business history and international law scholarship.
Perrone's book is an elegantly written account of both investment law's origin story and its contemporary practice. Taking a deep dive into the archives and the jurisprudence, readers learn that arbitral output today is fully faithful to the legal imagination of the regime's founding fathers. Like their predecessors, contemporary norm entrepreneurs elide engagement with local communities even as the regime moves to adopt a proceduralist, good governance, rationale. Inviting readers to rethink the investment law regime, Perrone offers a critical and timely intervention, conjoining the present with the past, with a view to imagining a different future for international law.
This timely book subverts the tradition by offering its own, meticulously researched and boldly argued, story of international investment law. Perrone unmasks the hidden figures whose legal and political imagination spawned the global regime of investment protection, unveiling the key drivers behind its creation and rapid expansion in the recent decades.
Nicolás Perrone's fascinating book explores the blueprint that had been made in the 1950s and 1960s for the setting up of a system of international investment protection. At a time when the reform of this system is being contemplated, this timely book calls our attention to the early thinking of a coalition of diverse leaders from business, law and finance, and to how arbitrators willingly carried out the ideas in the blueprint by building a legal superstructure through the interpretation of the investment treaties.
Notă biografică
Nicolás M Perrone is a Research Associate Professor at Universidad Andrés Bello, Chile. He has previously taught at Durham University and Universidad Externado de Colombia. Nicolás has been Visiting Professor at Universidad Nacional de San Martín, the International University College of Turin, and Università del Piemonte Orientale, a faculty member of the Institute for Global Law and Policy (Harvard Law School) and a Visiting Lecturer at Xi'an Jiaotong School of Law. Nicolás has also consulted for the OECD, and worked as a legal fellow for UNCTAD.