Section Information
Section Description Provided by Instructor
NOTE: Cannot receive degree credit for this course (L6932) and L6541 Investment Treaty Law and Arbitration.
NOTE SPECIAL SCHEDULE FOR SPRNG 2013: The seminar will meet a total of 13 sessions from 4:20-6:10 pm on Mondays and Thursdays during the following periods:
*January 24-31 (3 sessions: January 24, 28, and 31)
*February 18-28 (4 sessions: February 18, 21, 25, and 28)
*March 25-April 11 (6 sessions: March 25 and 28; April 1, 4, 8, 11)
International investment law consists of those international legal principles that define the obligations of states toward the investments of aliens within their territory. This seminar will consider the development of this body of law from its earliest days to the present. It will begin with a review of the legal principles espoused by the United States and other Western countries at the beginning of the last century, when there were few independent countries interested in challenging these views. The seminar then will consider the development of dissent from this Western consensus, in the Communist world, in Latin America, and in the newly-independent states of Asia and Africa that emerged following the Second World War. Our consideration of this long period of discord will be followed by discussion of the so-called "Washington consensus" that developed in the 80s and 90s, some parts of which are reflected in the thousands of bilateral investment treaties that have been concluded, largely in the last 30 years. We then will focus on those investment treaties, and the many arbitral awards that have interpreted them, to identify (1) key principles of investment law on which a broad consensus has emerged and (2) difficulties that arise in applying those principles to particular situations. Finally, the seminar will consider the relationship between international investment law and efforts by states -- jointly or separately -- to promote environmental protection, labor rights, and investments that serve the long-term interests of the population of the host state. We will discuss whether these goals can be pursued effectively under the principles on which a consensus now exists, whether these principles need to change, or whether some additional principles need to evolve.
Evaluation will be based on class participation and eight short reaction papers to be written by each student during the semester.
Semester
Spring 2013
Section
001
Schedule
MR 4:20 –6:10 p.m.
Location
WJW 101
Points
2.0
Method of Evaluation
Paper
J.D. Writing Credit
Minor (automatic), Major (only upon consultation) (I am happy to supervise LLM writing projects related to the subject matter of this course if permission is sought early in the semester)
Course Limitations
Instructor Pre-requisites
None
Instructor Co-requisites
None
Recommended Courses
Basic course on public international law
Other Limitations
Cannot receive degree credit for this course (L6932) and L6541 Investment Treaty Law and Arbitration. See course description for the meeting dates of the special Spring 2013 course schedule.
