2021
DOI: 10.1177/00208523211007898
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The unsustainable political economy of investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms1

Abstract: Investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms were intended to protect companies from the Global North against expropriation by Global South countries. Since 2000, investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms have increasingly been used against Northern countries to obtain compensation for and constrain policy decisions around nationalisation and remunicipalisation, as well as around the environmental or social regulation of service provision that threatens commercial interests. Social movements and governments… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…the USMCA and CPTPP retain ISDS, but limit its application in terms of who it applies to, the disputes it applies to, and the procedures it applies to, whereas the CEE CAI and the EU-U.K. trade agreement have not yet addressed ISDS. At the same time, there has been increased political efforts to counter the increase of ISDS claims since 2000 [5]. Several countries in the Global South, such as Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, and South Africa, have initiated the termination, renegotiation, or complete rejection of BITs.…”
Section: Status Of Application Of Isdsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the USMCA and CPTPP retain ISDS, but limit its application in terms of who it applies to, the disputes it applies to, and the procedures it applies to, whereas the CEE CAI and the EU-U.K. trade agreement have not yet addressed ISDS. At the same time, there has been increased political efforts to counter the increase of ISDS claims since 2000 [5]. Several countries in the Global South, such as Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, and South Africa, have initiated the termination, renegotiation, or complete rejection of BITs.…”
Section: Status Of Application Of Isdsmentioning
confidence: 99%