Related to your search
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
See all partner content
The Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI), a joint center of Columbia Law School and Columbia Climate School at Columbia University, is the only university-based applied research center and forum dedicated to the study, practice, and discussion of sustainable international investment. It develops practical approaches for governments, investors, communities, and other stakeholders to maximize the benefits of international investment for sustainable development. Applying its legal, economic, and policy expertise, CCSI addresses sustainable investment holistically, bridging investment law, natural resource management, human rights, economics, political economy, and environmental management. It works to strengthen the sustainable development potential of international investment, and to ensure that international investment is mutually beneficial for investors and the citizens of recipient countries. http://ccsi.columbia.edu/
Search Results
2. Advocates Say ISDS Is Necessary Because Domestic Courts Are ‘Inadequate,’ But Claims and Decisions Don’t Reveal Systemic Failing
3. A European Committee on Foreign Investment?
4. Africa rising out of itself: The growth of intra-African FDI
5. A future European FDI screening system: solution or problem?
6. A G20 Facility to rekindle FDI flows
7. Agricultural Investments: A Primer for Host Government Lawyers and Local Lawyers in Private Practice
8. Agricultural Investments under International Investment Law
9. AIM Investment Report 2015: Trends and Policy Challenges
10. A legally binding instrument on business and human rights to advance accountability and access to justice
11. Allocation of Climate-Related Risks in Investor–State Mining Contracts
12. Alternatives to Investor-State Dispute Settlement
13. A Market Mechanism for the Creation of a Climate-differentiated Market in the Steel Industry
14. An appellate body for international investment disputes: How appealing is it?
15. A new challenge for emerging markets: the need to develop an outward FDI policy
16. A new foreign direct investment accounting methodology for economic development organizations
17. An international framework to discipline outward FDI incentives?
18. An International Investment Court: panacea or purgatory?
19. An International Law Framework for Climate-Aligned Investment Governance
20. Another brick in the wall: the EU-India investment-facilitation mechanism
21. An outline for systematic reform of the investment law regime
22. Antitrust and Sustainability: A Landscape Analysis
23. A Policy Framework to Approach the Use of Associated Petroleum Gas
24. A reading of intra-EU BITs in light of recent developments of EU law
25. Assessing the legality of data-localization requirements: Before the tribunals or at the negotiating table?
26. A stronger role for the European Parliament in the design of the EU’s investment policy as a legitimacy safeguard
27. Australia: Downstream linkages
28. Best Practices in Data Driven Development Planning in Mining Regions
29. Beware of FDI statistics!
30. Beware of freezing clauses in international investment agreements
31. Beyond Trade Deals: Charting a Post-Brexit Course for UK Investment Treaties
32. Billion-Dollar Exposure: Investor-State Dispute Settlement in Mozambique’s Fossil Fuel Sector
33. Botswana: Downstream linkages
34. Brazil’s bilateral investment treaties: More than a new investment treaty model?
35. Briefing for Grass-Roots Organizations – Bridging the Information Gap: How Access to Land Contracts Can Serve Community Rights
36. Briefing: Governing Land Investments: Do Governments Have Legal Support Gaps?
37. Briefing Note: Aligning International Investment Agreements with the Sustainable Development Goals
38. Briefing Note: Investment Promotion and Facilitation for Sustainable Development
39. Briefing Note: Modern Provisions in Investment Treaties
40. Bringing the state back in: India’s 2015 model BIT
41. Broadening the Global Compact agenda
42. Business Guide: Respecting the Human Rights of Communities in Wind and Solar Project Deployment
43. Canada’s non-reciprocal BIT with China: Would the US or Europe do the same?
44. Can Existing International Agreements on ‘Investment Facilitation’ Advance Sustainable Development, Climate Action, and Human Rights?
45. Can host countries have legitimate expectations?
46. Can India emulate China in attracting and benefitting from FDI?
47. Can Timor-Leste Rely on its Endowments to Achieve the Strategic Development Plan Targets?
48. Carajás Corridor in Brazil: Could an SEA Have Reconciled Shared-Use Infrastructure and Environmental Protection?
49. Carbon Accounting by Public and Private Financial Institutions: Can We Be Sure Climate Finance Is Leading to Emissions Reductions?
50. Catalyzing Public and Private Investments to Scale Up Socio-Bioeconomy and Nature-Based Solutions
51. CCSI Submission to the Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment: Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) Mechanisms and the Right To a Clean, Healthy, and Sustainable Environment
52. CFIUS and China in the post-COVID environment
53. CFIUS reforms must be reformed
54. Challenges for the EU-China BIT negotiations
55. Challenges on the road toward a multilateral investment court
56. Changing geography: prospects for Asian actors as global rule-makers in international investment law
57. China moves the G20 on international investment
58. China needs to complement its “going-out” policy with a “going-in” strategy
59. China’s Belt and Road investment governance: building a hybrid model
60. China’s foreign investment complaint mechanism: A new beginning of foreign investment governance reform?
61. China’s new Foreign Investment Law: deeper reform and more trust are needed
62. China’s “new normal” in international investment agreements
63. Chinese FDI in the EU: learning from the renewable energy sector
64. Circular Economy in the Industrial Goods Sector: A Framework for Understanding Private Sector Progress and Innovation
65. Circularity in Mineral and Renewable Energy Value Chains: Overview of Technology, Policy, and Finance Aspects
66. Clearing the Path: Withdrawal of Consent and Termination as Next Steps for Reforming International Investment Law
67. Climate Action Needs Investment Governance, Not Investment Protection and Arbitration
68. Climate Impact Screening and Reporting: A Venture Capital Perspective
69. Commentary: Nature-Based Insetting: A Harmful Distraction from Corporate Decarbonization
70. Community Benefit Sharing and Renewable Energy and Green Hydrogen Projects: Policy Guidance for Governments
71. Community-Investor Negotiation Guide 1: Preparing in Advance for Potential Investors
72. Community-Investor Negotiation Guide 2: Negotiating Contracts with Investors
73. Comparison Between the IPCC Reporting Framework and Country Practice
74. Conference Report: Climate Change and Sustainable Investment in Natural Resources: From Consensus to Action
75. Conflicts Between GHG Accounting Methodologies in the Steel Industry
76. Corporate inversions and FDI in the United States
77. Corporate Net-Zero Pledges: The Bad and the Ugly
78. Corporations need to look beyond profits
79. Cost allocation in ICSID arbitration: theory and (mis)application
80. Cost allocation in investment arbitration: Forward toward incentivization
81. Costs and Benefits of Investment Treaties: Practical Considerations for States
82. Could BITs and BATs be combined to ensure access to human rights remedies?
83. COVID-19 and FDI: How should governments respond?
84. COVID-19 and Land-based Investment: Changing Landscapes
85. CSR in an Investment Facilitation Framework for Development: From a “race to the bottom” to a “march to the top”
86. Dangers lurking in the OECD tax proposals
87. Decarbonization Pathways for Paraguay’s Energy Sector
88. Decommissioning Liability at the End of Offshore Oil and Gas: A Review of International Obligations, National Laws, and Contractual Approaches in Ten Jurisdictions
89. Decommissioning Offshore Oil and Gas Infrastructure in the Face of Climate Change and the Energy Transition
90. Democracies conclude more and stricter international investment agreements – but why?
91. Designing a Legal Regime to Capture Capital Gains Tax on Indirect Transfers of Mineral and Petroleum Rights: A Practical Guide
92. Divestments by MNEs: What do we know about why they happen?
93. Do developing countries benefit from outward FDI?
94. Do not neglect establishment trade: the China-US example
95. Don't Throw Caution to the Wind: In the green energy transition, not all critical minerals will be goldmines
96. Effective Shareholder Engagement to Address the Food Sector’s SDG-Related Impacts in Mexico
97. Electric Utility Alignment with the SDGs & the Paris Climate Agreement
98. Emerging Practices in Community Development Agreements
99. Employment from Mining and Agricultural Investments: How Much Myth, How Much Reality?
100. Enabling a Just Transition: Protecting Human Rights in Renewable Energy Projects: A Briefing For Policymakers
- « Previous
- Next »
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4