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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/
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2. WTO《投资促进发展协定》需要有效规制负责任商业行为
3. 在未来的 WTO 投资促进发展协定中定义投资
4. Why public policy exceptions have not delivered and how to make them more effective
5. Why omitting general public policy exceptions from investment treaties is a setback for the right to regulate
6. What can governments do to boost FDI for sustainable development?
7. U.S. outward FDI: Current flows lowered in weakened global economy but attraction of emerging markets remains
8. Untying the Land Knot: Turning Investment Challenges Into Opportunities for All Citizens
9. Unexpected opportunities to support investor-state dispute prevention through the WTO Investment Facilitation for Development Agreement
10. Ukraine's inward FDI and its policy context
11. Trying to change the rules for responding to arbitration unilaterally: The proposed new framework for investor-state dispute settlement for the EU
12. They can run but they can’t hide: MNEs and responsible business conduct
13. The WTO Investment Facilitation for Development Agreement needs a strong provision on responsible business conduct
14. The way forward in reforming the legitimate expectations test
15. The unbalanced dragon: China's uneven provincial and regional FDI performance
16. The public law challenge: Killing or rethinking international investment law?
17. The new WTO Investment Facilitation for Development Agreement
18. The new Canadian Model investment treaty: A quiet evolution
19. The limits of capacity building for investment contract negotiations
20. The launch of a new generation of the ICSID Rules
21. The global corporate minimum tax and MNE home countries
22. The future of global value chains: Key issues
23. The compensatory nature of moral damages in investor-state arbitration
24. Swiss outward FDI and its policy context
25. Swiss inward FDI and its policy context
26. Subsidies as a regulatory object: from trade subsidies to outward FDI subsidies
27. Strengthening regional investment facilitation rulemaking in Asia: the why and the how
28. Strengthening international negotiation assistance for developing host countries
29. Shaping responsible business conduct through a Multilateral Treaty on Due Diligence
30. Settlement of investor-state disputes: can states avoid arbitration?
31. Russian outward FDI and its policy context
32. Roll out the red carpet and they will come: Investment promotion and FDI inflows
33. Rethinking umbrella clauses in international investment agreements
34. Responsible business conduct: Re-shaping global business
35. Reducing the reliance on global value chains by strengthening backward linkages
36. Protecting FDI contributing to host countries’ development:The rise of the “forgotten” Salini criterion as part of the definition of investment
37. Promoting responsible business through the revised ILO Tripartite Declaration
38. Outward FDI in Austria and its policy context, 2010
39. Outward FDI from Ukraine and its policy context
40. Outward FDI from Slovenia and its policy context
41. Outward FDI from Poland and its policy context, 2011
42. Outward FDI from Italy and its policy context
43. Outward FDI from India and its policy context
44. Outward FDI from Hungary and its policy context
45. Outward FDI from Greece and its policy context
46. Outward FDI from Germany and its policy context: update 2011
47. Outward FDI from Germany and its policy context, 2012
48. Outward FDI from Colombia and its policy context
49. Outward FDI from China and its policy context, 2012
50. Outward FDI from China and its policy context
51. Outward FDI from Canada and its policy context
52. Outward FDI from Brazil and its policy context, 2012
53. Outward FDI and home country employment
54. Norwegian outward FDI and its policy context
55. Navigating 21st century industrial policy
56. Nation states and nationality of MNEs
57. National companies or foreign affiliates: Whose contribution to growth is greater?
58. Much ado about nothing? State-controlled entities and the change in German investment law
59. Mind the force majeure clauses in investment contracts
60. Learning from Brexit: what parallels for decoupling from China?
61. Law at two speeds: Legal frameworks regulating foreign investment in the global South
62. Knowledge, FDI and catching-up strategies
63. Inward foreign direct investment: Does it enable or constrain domestic technology entrepreneurship?
64. Inward FDI in Russia and its policy context
65. Inward FDI in Portugal and its policy context, 2011
66. Inward FDI in Poland and its policy context, 2012
67. Inward FDI in Poland and its policy context
68. Inward FDI in Peru and its policy context
69. Inward FDI in Pakistan and its policy context
70. Inward FDI in Norway and its policy context
71. Inward FDI in Malaysia and its policy context
72. Inward FDI in Italy and its policy context
73. Inward FDI in Israel and its policy context
74. Inward FDI in Ireland and its policy context
75. Inward FDI in Indonesia and its policy context
76. Inward FDI in India and its policy context
77. Inward FDI in Hungary and its policy context
78. Inward FDI in Germany and its policy context: Update 2011
79. Inward FDI in Germany and its policy context
80. Inward FDI in Finland and its policy context
81. Inward FDI in Egypt and its policy context
82. Inward FDI in Colombia and its policy context
83. Inward FDI in China and its policy context, 2012
84. Inward FDI in China and its policy context
85. Inward FDI in Chile and its policy context
86. Inward FDI in Canada and its policy context
87. Inward FDI in Belgium and its policy context
88. Inward FDI in Austria and its policy context, 2010
89. Inward FDI in Argentina and its policy context
90. Investor-state dispute settlement: A government’s dilemma
91. Investment promotion in the new international context: what is the next frontier and how to get there
92. Investment Opportunities in Mekelle, Tigray State, Ethiopia
93. Investment incentives and the global competition for capital
94. Investment facilitation in the WTO: The case for early harvesting
95. Investment dispute management: The importance of the domestic dimension
96. International investment law, intellectual property and development
97. Indirect FDI under EU FDI regulation in times of war: is the anti-circumvention clause enough?
98. Implementing an Investment Facilitation Framework for Development: Lessons from the Trade Facilitation Agreement
99. 引进外商直接投资(IFDI): 促进还是抑制科技创业?
100. 新一代 ICSID 规则的发布
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