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Columbia FDI Perspectives
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Columbia FDI Perspectives is an occasional series of perspectives on important and topical foreign direct investment issues. http://ccsi.columbia.edu/publications/columbia-fdi-perspectives/
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
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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
52. The Arab Spring: How soon will foreign investors return?
53. The Arab Awakening, act II: Time to move more boldly on investment
54. Subsidies as a regulatory object: from trade subsidies to outward FDI subsidies
55. Strengthening regional investment facilitation rulemaking in Asia: the why and the how
56. Strengthening international negotiation assistance for developing host countries
57. State-controlled entities control nearly US$ 2 trillion in foreign assets
58. State-controlled entities as "investors" under international investment agreements
59. State-controlled entities as claimants in international investment arbitration:an early assessment
60. Starting anew in international investment law
61. Sovereign wealth funds: much ado about some money
62. Shaping responsible business conduct through a Multilateral Treaty on Due Diligence
63. Shaping global business conduct: The 2011 update of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
64. Settlement of investor-state disputes: can states avoid arbitration?
65. Roll out the red carpet and they will come: Investment promotion and FDI inflows
66. Rethinking umbrella clauses in international investment agreements
67. Responsible business conduct: Re-shaping global business
68. Responsible agricultural investment: is there a significant role for the law to promote sustainability?
69. Regional concentration of FDI involves trade-offs in post-reform India
70. Reducing the reliance on global value chains by strengthening backward linkages
71. Reconciling IMF rules and international investment agreements: An innovative derogation for capital controls
72. Recalibrating interpretive authority
73. Protecting FDI contributing to host countries’ development:The rise of the “forgotten” Salini criterion as part of the definition of investment
74. Promoting responsible business through the revised ILO Tripartite Declaration
75. President Obama's International Tax Proposals Could Go Further
76. Political risk insurance and bilateral investment treaties: a view from below
77. Outward investment by Trans-Latin enterprises: reasons for optimism
78. Outward FDI and home country employment
79. Navigating 21st century industrial policy
80. Nation states and nationality of MNEs
81. National Security with a Canadian Twist: The Investment Canada Act and the New National Security Review Test
82. National companies or foreign affiliates: Whose contribution to growth is greater?
83. Myopic reliance on natural resources: How African countries can diversify inward FDI
84. Multilateral investment disciplines: Don’t forget the GATS!
85. Much ado about nothing? State-controlled entities and the change in German investment law
86. Minority rules: State ownership and foreign direct investment risk mitigation strategy
87. Mining for facts: PacRim Cayman LLC v. El Salvador
88. Mind the force majeure clauses in investment contracts
89. Lessons from South Africa’s BITs review
90. Learning from Brexit: what parallels for decoupling from China?
91. Law at two speeds: Legal frameworks regulating foreign investment in the global South
92. Land grab or development opportunity? International farmland deals in Africa
93. Labor provisions in bilateral investment treaties: Does the new US Model BIT provide a template for the future?
94. Knowledge, FDI and catching-up strategies
95. It's time for an EU Investment Promotion Agency
96. Is the party-appointed arbitrator a "pernicious institution"? A reply to Professor Hans Smit
97. Is Chinese FDI pushing Latin America into natural resources?
98. Is China's outward investment in oil a global security concern?
99. Is a model EU BIT possible—or even desirable?
100. Inward foreign direct investment: Does it enable or constrain domestic technology entrepreneurship?
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