Dozent/in |
Dr. iur. Rodrigo Javier Polanco Lazo |
Veranstaltungsart |
Vorlesung |
Code |
FS241078 |
Semester |
Frühjahrssemester 2024 |
Durchführender Fachbereich |
Öffentliches Recht |
Studienstufe |
Master |
Termin/e |
Fr, 23.02.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 01.03.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 08.03.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 15.03.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 22.03.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 12.04.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 19.04.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 26.04.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 03.05.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 10.05.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 17.05.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, 4.B51 Fr, 24.05.2024, 12:15 - 14:00 Uhr, HS 11 |
Umfang |
2 Semesterwochenstunden |
Inhalt |
The international regime for the protection of foreign investments is an important part of International Economic Law. Switzerland alone has entered into over 120 Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreements (BITs) in order to protect the investments of Swiss companies in partner countries from non-commercial risks such as unlawful expropriation, discriminatory regulations or restrictions on capital flows. Investment protection clauses are also part of preferential trade agreements (PTAs), like CETA and the CPTPP, as well as multilateral treaties, such as the Energy Charter Treaty. In total, today there are more than 3000 international investment agreements (IIAs), including both BITs and PTAs with investment chapters.
The lecture offers an in-depth introduction to international investment protection law, focusing on both the substantive principles governing the protection of foreign investments and procedural mechanisms for the settlement of disputes between the host state and the foreign investor. Following an overview of the history and the underlying rationale of investment protection law, the course will examine the general principles such as expropriation, non-discrimination, fair and equitable treatment, as well as investor-state dispute settlement. Emphasis is also placed on the criticisms against international investment protection, as well as the tension between the international obligations relating to investment protection and the state's’ sovereign right to regulate social standards, environmental protection or human rights issues. |
E-Learning |
https://lms.uzh.ch/auth/repositoryentry/17509056878/infos/0 |
Lernziele |
To provide students with an understanding of the need for international protection of foreign investors and investments, and the solutions offered by different treaty regimes; to assess the downsides and risks of investment protection; to promote practical skills in arbitration cases; to provide a deeper understanding of the role of investment arbitration in recent treaty negotiations with a view to a comparative law analysis. |
Voraussetzungen |
The course is designed for advanced students with a strong command of English and an interest in globalisation and international economic relations. Ideally (but not necessarily), students have basic knowledge of Public International Law. |
Sprache |
Englisch |
Abschlussform / Credits |
Graded oral examination (open book) / 5 Credits
|
Hinweise |
Lecture and case studies |
Hörer-/innen |
Ja |
Kontakt |
rodrigo.polanco@doz.unilu.ch |
Literatur |
What’s indispensable?
• Reader (syllabus, cases, legal texts) will be provided as a PDF file.
• Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer, International Investment Law – Text, Cases and Materials, 3rd edition, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2020.
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