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Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
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The Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment is the only university-based applied research center and forum dedicated to the study, practice and discussion of sustainable international investment. CCSI was previously named the Vale Columbia Center on Sustainable International Investment. http://ccsi.columbia.edu/
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2. Enabling a Just Transition: Protecting Human Rights in Renewable Energy Projects: A Briefing For Policymakers
3. GHG Accounting Methods in the Aluminum Industry
4. Net Zero Roadmap for Copper and Nickel
5. Transferred Emissions Are Still Emissions: Why Fossil Fuel Asset Sales Need Enhanced Transparency and Carbon Accounting
6. Transferred Emissions Are Still Emissions: Why Fossil Fuel Asset Sales Need Enhanced Transparency and Carbon Accounting
7. Allocation of Climate-Related Risks in Investor–State Mining Contracts
8. Business Guide: Respecting the Human Rights of Communities in Wind and Solar Project Deployment
9. Conflicts Between GHG Accounting Methodologies in the Steel Industry
10. How Much Have the Oil Supermajors Contributed to Climate Change?
11. International Investment Governance and Achieving a Just Zero-Carbon Future
12. International Investment Law and the Extractive Industries
13. Investment Incentives: A Survey of Policies and Approaches for Sustainable Investment
14. Legal Primer: Respecting the Human Rights of Communities in Wind and Solar Project Deployment
15. Legal Provisions on Shared Use of Mining Infrastructure: Rail, Port, and Power
16. New Producer Contract Terms and Uncertainty: Lessons From the Recent Past
17. North Africa Can Reduce Europe's Dependence on Russian Gas by Transporting Wasted Gas Through Existing Infrastructure
18. Scaling Investment in Renewable Energy Generation to Achieve Sustainable Development Goals 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) and 13 (Climate Action) and the Paris Agreement: Roadblocks and Drivers
19. Supporting Good Governance of Extractive Industries in Politically Hostile Settings: Rethinking Approaches and Strategies
20. The Role of Investment Treaties and Investor–State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) in Renewable Energy Investments
21. Unlocking the Power of Reformers to Achieve Better Progress on Extractives Governance
22. Advocates Say ISDS Is Necessary Because Domestic Courts Are ‘Inadequate,’ But Claims and Decisions Don’t Reveal Systemic Failing
23. Carbon Accounting by Public and Private Financial Institutions: Can We Be Sure Climate Finance Is Leading to Emissions Reductions?
24. CFIUS and China in the post-COVID environment
25. China’s foreign investment complaint mechanism: A new beginning of foreign investment governance reform?
26. Comparison Between the IPCC Reporting Framework and Country Practice
27. Corporate Net-Zero Pledges: The Bad and the Ugly
28. COVID-19 and Land-based Investment: Changing Landscapes
29. CSR in an Investment Facilitation Framework for Development: From a “race to the bottom” to a “march to the top”
30. Dangers lurking in the OECD tax proposals
31. Decarbonization Pathways for Paraguay’s Energy Sector
32. Divestments by MNEs: What do we know about why they happen?
33. Engaging diaspora direct investors: The four elements of successful policy regimes
34. FDI and CSR to promote social entrepreneurship and sustainable FDI: Lessons from India
35. Five Years After the Adoption of the Paris Agreement, Are Climate Change Considerations Reflected in Mining Contracts?
36. Fixing the Business of Food: Aligning Food Company Practices with the SDGs
37. Getting From Ideas to Reality: Building Political Support to Translate Good Ideas Into Actual Practice
38. Guide on incentives for responsible investment in agriculture and food systems
39. Handbook for SDG-Aligned Food Companies: Four Pillar Framework Standards
40. Increasing transparency in investment facilitation: focused support is needed
41. In defense of quantum
42. International tax reform and FDI
43. Investment facilitation and India: A closer look
44. Investment Governance in Africa to Support Climate Resilience and Decarbonization
45. It’s quantum!
46. Materializing corporate social responsibility in investor-state dispute settlement
47. Mobilizing FDI for sustainable infrastructure investment
48. National Contact Points for responsible business conduct and access to remedy: Achievements and challenges after 20 years
49. New Tech, New Deal: Mining Policy Options in the Face of New Technology
50. Nigeria’s Petroleum Industry Bill: A Missed Opportunity to Prepare for the Zero-Carbon Future
51. Obsolescence of the obsolescing bargain: Why governments must get investor-state contracts right
52. Reducing regulatory risk to attract and retain FDI
53. Responsible Coffee Sourcing: Towards a Living Income for Producers
54. Roadmap to Zero-Carbon Electrification of Africa
55. Room to move: Building flexibility into investment treaties to meet climate-change commitments
56. Should the European Union Fix, Leave or Kill the Energy Charter Treaty?
57. The Case for a Climate-Smart Update of the Africa Mining Vision
58. The EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment: Stuck half-way?
59. The Hague Rules on Business and Human Rights Arbitration
60. The OECD MNE Guidelines: Recent complaints on emerging issues show the need to revise standards on responsible business conduct
61. The OFDI policy path and the product space
62. Transparency for Whom? Grounding Land Investment Transparency in the Needs of Local Actors
63. A G20 Facility to rekindle FDI flows
64. Best Practices in Data Driven Development Planning in Mining Regions
65. Briefing Note: Aligning International Investment Agreements with the Sustainable Development Goals
66. Briefing Note: Investment Promotion and Facilitation for Sustainable Development
67. Briefing Note: Modern Provisions in Investment Treaties
68. Corporate inversions and FDI in the United States
69. COVID-19 and FDI: How should governments respond?
70. Don't Throw Caution to the Wind: In the green energy transition, not all critical minerals will be goldmines
71. Electric Utility Alignment with the SDGs & the Paris Climate Agreement
72. Enabling the full participation of developing countries in negotiating an Investment Facilitation Framework for Development
73. Equipping the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation for the Low-Carbon Transition: How Are Other National Oil Companies Adapting?
74. Explaining the rise of third-party funding in investment arbitration
75. Facilitating investment through IIAs: The case of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement
76. FDI screening regulation and the recent EU guidance: What options do member states have?
77. Free, prior and informed consent: Addressing political realities to improve impact
78. Free, Prior and Informed Consent: Getting political to improve impact
79. From investment promotion and protection to investment regulation
80. Getting the most out of extractive industries transparency: How a more explicit treatment of political considerations could strengthen the impact of transparency efforts
81. Government Briefing: Incorporating Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) into Investment Approval Processes
82. India’s blueprint for tackling opportunistic acquisitions during COVID-19, with Chinese firms in mind
83. Insulating a WTO Investment Facilitation Framework from ISDS
84. Investment aftercare matters
85. Investment and human rights: Is there an elephant in the room?
86. Investment facilitation and the GATS: Do overlaps matter?
87. Is USMCA really “the new gold standard” of investment protection?
88. Learning from Brazil’s bilateral investment treaties
89. Leveraging corporate tax incentives to attract FDI: design and implementation considerations
90. Mining and the SDGs: a 2020 status update
91. Outward FDI and a global compact on home-country investment incentives
92. Outward FDI under China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Between regulation and adaption
93. Preparing Legal Frameworks for Environmental Disasters: Practical Considerations for Host States
94. Regulating multinational digital platform enterprises: The case of Uber
95. Squaring bilateralism with multilateralism: What investment law reformers can learn from the international tax regime
96. Submission to Bonsucro re Production Standard V5 (2019-21)
97. Tackling the EIA Impact Gap: Addressing Political Economy Realities to Bring Actual Practice Closer to Best Practice
98. Taming the chaos in investment treaty protection
99. The blind side of international investment law and policy: The need for investor-state conflict management mechanisms fostering investment retention and expansion
100. The development dimension of an investment facilitation framework
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