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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. Will the United States join the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or neither?
3. Why we need a global appellate mechanism for international investment law
4. Why some advanced economy firms prefer to be taken over by Chinese acquirers
5. Why good governance of land and tenure security need to be part of the Sustainable Development Goal framework
6. When is investor-state dispute settlement appropriate to resolve investment disputes? An idea for a rule-of-law ratings mechanism
7. What’s next for the investment facilitation agenda?
8. We need an international support programme for sustainable investment facilitation
9. Using investor-state dispute settlement to enforce investor obligations
10. Untangling the effects of “special purpose entities” on global FDI
11. Unlocking the Power of Reformers to Achieve Better Progress on Extractives Governance
12. United States corporate tax reform and global FDI flows
13. Understanding how the various definitions of Permanent Establishment can limit the taxation ability of resource- rich source countries
14. Transparency in the Extractive Industries: Getting serious about politics to get serious about impact
15. Transparency in Land-Based Investment: Key Questions and Next Steps
16. Transparency for Whom? Grounding Land Investment Transparency in the Needs of Local Actors
17. Transferred Emissions Are Still Emissions: Why Fossil Fuel Asset Sales Need Enhanced Transparency and Carbon Accounting
18. Transferred Emissions Are Still Emissions: Why Fossil Fuel Asset Sales Need Enhanced Transparency and Carbon Accounting
19. To what extent has FDI benefited the transition economies of Central and Eastern Europe?
20. Towards an Investment Facilitation Framework: Why? What? When?
21. Towards an Indicative List of FDI Sustainability Characteristics
22. Toward balanced Arab regional investment regulations
23. Toward arbitration between subnational units and foreign investors?
24. To succeed in China, focus on interests rather than rules
25. The US-Mexico-Canada Agreement: the new gold standard to enforce investment treaty protection?
26. The useful institution of an investment ombudsperson
27. The Transparency Rules and Transparency Convention: A good start and modelfor broader reform in investor-state arbitration
28. The Trans-Pacific Partnership investment chapter sets a new worldwide standard
29. The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, investor-state dispute settlement and China
30. The TPP’s Investment Chapter: Entrenching, Rather Than Reforming, a Flawed System
31. The state of the international investment law and policy regime
32. The Role of Investment Treaties and Investor–State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) in Renewable Energy Investments
33. The road to responsible investment treaties
34. The rise of self-judging essential security interest clauses in international investment agreements
35. The rise of FDI income, and what it means for the balance of payments ofdeveloping countries
36. The Renewable Power of the Mine
37. The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership’s investment chapter: One step forward, two steps back?
38. The Policy Implications of Third-Party Funding in Investor-State Dispute Settlement
39. The Pan-African Investment Code: a good first step, but more is needed
40. The Pacific Rim as a platform for international investment law harmonization
41. The other side of transparency
42. The OFDI policy path and the product space
43. The OECD MNE Guidelines: Recent complaints on emerging issues show the need to revise standards on responsible business conduct
44. The next phase of IIA reforms
45. The next generation of Chinese investment treaties: A balanced paradigm in an era of change
46. The nationality of the international judge: Policy options for the Multilateral Investment Court
47. The Mauritius Convention on Transparency: Comments on the treaty and its role in increasing transparency of investor-State arbitration
48. The importance of negotiating good contracts
49. The Hague Rules on Business and Human Rights Arbitration
50. The EU proposal for an Investment Court System: what lessons can be learned from the Arab Investment Court?
51. The EU investment court: challenges on the path ahead
52. The EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment: Stuck half-way?
53. The escape motivation of emerging market multinational enterprises
54. The Equal Representation in Arbitration Pledge: two comments on its scope of application
55. The E15 Task Force on Investment Policy
56. The development dimension of an investment facilitation framework
57. The crucial role of infrastructure in attracting FDI by Julian Donaubauer, Birgit Meyer and Peter Nunnenkamp
58. The Climate Crisis, Global Land Use, and Human Rights: Crucial Considerations
59. The China-EU BIT: The emerging “Global BIT 2.0”?
60. The challenges for Chinese FDI in Europe
61. The case for harmonizing the international regulation of mining
62. The case for an advisory center on international investment law
63. The case for a multilateral or plurilateral framework on investment
64. The Case for a Climate-Smart Update of the Africa Mining Vision
65. The case against third-party funding in investment arbitration
66. The Canada-China BIT 2012: Perspectives and Implications
67. The blind side of international investment law and policy: The need for investor-state conflict management mechanisms fostering investment retention and expansion
68. Taming the chaos in investment treaty protection
69. Tackling the EIA Impact Gap: Addressing Political Economy Realities to Bring Actual Practice Closer to Best Practice
70. Sustainable FDI for sustainable development
71. Supporting Good Governance of Extractive Industries in Politically Hostile Settings: Rethinking Approaches and Strategies
72. Submission to Bonsucro re Production Standard V5 (2019-21)
73. Submissions to UNCITRAL Working Group II on Arbitration and Conciliation: Proposal for Specific Text
74. Submission Re: Criminalization and attacks against indigenous peoples defending their rights: proposals for action to prevent and protect
75. Submission on the draft General Comment on “State obligations under the ICESCR in the Context of Business Activities”
76. Strengthening multi-stakeholder cooperation in the international investment regime: The Brazilian model
77. State-owned enterprises face challenges in foreign acquisitions
78. State Control over Interpretation of Investment Treaties
79. Squaring bilateralism with multilateralism: What investment law reformers can learn from the international tax regime
80. Space for Local Content Policies and Strategies: A Crucial Time to Revisit an Old Debate
81. Singapore: Downstream linkages
82. Should the European Union Fix, Leave or Kill the Energy Charter Treaty?
83. Securing Adequate Legal Defense in Proceedings under International Investment Agreements: A Scoping Study
84. 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
85. Room to move: Building flexibility into investment treaties to meet climate-change commitments
86. Roadmap to Zero-Carbon Electrification of Africa
87. Ripe for Refinement: The State’s Role in Interpretation of FET, MFN, and Shareholder Rights
88. Review Mechanisms in Natural Resource Contracts
89. Responsible FDI is no longer optional
90. Responsible Coffee Sourcing: Towards a Living Income for Producers
91. Resourcing Green Technologies through Smart Mineral Enterprise Development: A Case Analysis of Cobalt
92. Reputational and Integrity Due Diligence on Investors
93. Report on Community Development Funds and Agreements in Guinea Under the New Mining Code
94. Report: Governing Land Investments: Do Governments Have Legal Support Gaps?
95. Regulating multinational digital platform enterprises: The case of Uber
96. Regional cooperation to enhance FDI in the development of offshore resources
97. Reducing regulatory risk to attract and retain FDI
98. Rapporteur’s Report on the Roundtable on States and State-Controlled Entities as Claimants in International Investment Arbitration
99. Protecting public welfare regulation through joint treaty party control: a ChAFTA innovation
100. Promoting sustainable FDI through international investment agreements
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