Related to your search
Columbia FDI Perspectives
See all series content
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
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. Absent from the discussion: The other half of investment promotion
3. A business perspective on a China - US bilateral investment treaty
4. Achieving sustainable development objectives in international investment: Could future IIAs impose sustainable development-related obligations on investors?
5. A China – US Bilateral Investment Treaty: A Template for a Multilateral Framework for Investment?
6. Advancing alternatives: Promoting mediation and conciliation in investor-state dispute settlement
7. Advancing climate-change goals: From reactive to proactive systemic integration
8. Africa rising out of itself: The growth of intra-African FDI
9. A managed dispute-resolution insurance scheme for countries in investor-state arbitration: Ensuring early legal representation of respondents
10. An Advisory Centre on International Investment Law: Is perfect the enemy of good?
11. An appellate body for international investment disputes: How appealing is it?
12. A new economic nationalism? Lessons from the PotashCorp decision in Canada
13. A new foreign direct investment accounting methodology for economic development organizations
14. A new geography of innovation—China and India rising
15. An opportunity to reimagine investment arbitration in Beijing
16. An outline for systematic reform of the investment law regime
17. A reading of intra-EU BITs in light of recent developments of EU law
18. Are SWFs Welcome Now?
19. Are trade-law inspired investment rules desirable?
20. Attracting FDI through BITs and RTAs: Does treaty content matter?
21. BEPS reform: The end of fiscal incentives to attract FDI?
22. Beware the discretionary choices of arbitrators
23. Beyond treasuries: A foreign direct investment program for U.S. infrastructure
24. Brazil’s bilateral investment treaties: More than a new investment treaty model?
25. Bringing the state back in: India’s 2015 model BIT
26. Canada’s non-reciprocal BIT with China: Would the US or Europe do the same?
27. Can India emulate China in attracting and benefitting from FDI?
28. Can the U.S. Remain an Attractive Host for FDI in the Auto Industry? New Labor Policy and Flexible Production
29. CFIUS part II? The US moves to restrict outbound FDI to China
30. Changing geography: prospects for Asian actors as global rule-makers in international investment law
31. China needs to complement its “going-out” policy with a “going-in” strategy
32. China’s “new normal” in international investment agreements
33. Chinese FDI in the EU: learning from the renewable energy sector
34. Chinese FDI in the United States is taking off: How to maximize its benefits?
35. Common structures of investment law in an age of increasingly complex treaty-making
36. Corruption and FDI: The role of social brokers
37. Cost allocation in ICSID arbitration: theory and (mis)application
38. Cost Allocation in Investment Arbitration: Back Toward Diversification
39. Cost allocation in investment arbitration: Forward toward incentivization
40. Defining investment in a future WTO agreement on investment facilitation for development
41. Democracies conclude more and stricter international investment agreements – but why?
42. Denying the benefits of the Energy Charter Treaty: Shifting the policy or just the burden of proof?
43. Developing country and industry materiality assessments to increase sustainable FDI
44. Different investment treaties, different effects
45. Does It Matter Who Invests in Your Country?
46. Do host countries really benefit from inward foreign direct investment?
47. Downstream Processing in Developing Countries: Opportunity or Mirage?
48. Economic patriotism: Dealing with Chinese direct investment in the United States
49. Emerging challengers in knowledge-based industries? The case of Indian pharmaceutical multinationals
50. Environmental concerns in international investment agreements: The "new era" has commenced, but harmonization remains far off
51. Ethical and legal implications of FDI in or near cultural heritage sites
52. EU investment agreements and the search for a new balance: A paradigm shift from laissez-faire liberalism toward embedded liberalism?
53. Evaluate Sustainable FDI to Promote Sustainable Development
54. FDI and CSR to promote social entrepreneurship and sustainable FDI: Lessons from India
55. FDI and sustainable development in the EU-China investment treaty: Neither high nor low, just realistic expectations
56. FDI, catch-up growth stages and stage-focused strategies
57. FDI incentives pay—politically
58. FDI in retailing and inflation: The case of India
59. FDI in Russia in difficult times
60. FDI stocks are a biased measure of foreign affiliate activity
61. FDI stocks are a biased measure of MNE affiliate activity: A response
62. Foreign direct investment and U.S. national security: CFIUS under the Obama Administration
63. Foreign divestment: What stays when multinationals leave?
64. From the FDI Triad to multiple FDI poles?
65. Germany, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership and investment-dispute settlement: Observations on a paradox
66. Good governance of third party funding
67. Go out and manufacture: Policy support for Chinese FDI in Africa
68. Got “critical minerals”? Hooray! But be careful!
69. Government-held equity in foreign investment projects: Good for host countries?
70. Governments and companies must address climate and governance risks when petroleum assets change hands
71. Greek FDI in the Balkans: How is it affected by the crisis in Greece?
72. Hardening soft law: strategic use of the OECD Guidelines to achieve meaningful outcomes
73. Host governments should not treat state-owned enterprises differently than other foreign investors
74. How are global value chains altering policy narratives?
75. How BRIC MNEs Deal with International Political Risk
76. How can governments help small enterprises integrate into global value chains?
77. How do consumer-focused multinational enterprises affect emerging markets?
78. How FDI in the mining sector can assist communities to achieve sustainable development
79. How host country governments can ensure competitive neutrality in cross-border M&As
80. How much do U.S. corporations know (and care) about bilateral investmenttreaties? Some hints from new survey evidence
81. How the private sector is changing Chinese investment in Africa?
82. How to deal with the growing incentives competition
83. How to get the best deal for massive FDI incentives
84. How to make global supply chains more resilient
85. Implementing an Investment Facilitation Framework for Development: Lessons from the Trade Facilitation Agreement
86. Improving infrastructure or lowering taxes to attract foreign direct investment?
87. In defense of bilateral investment treaties
88. Indian FDI falls in global economic crisis: Indian multinationals tread cautiously
89. Indirect FDI under EU FDI regulation in times of war: is the anti-circumvention clause enough?
90. Infrastructure for ore: Benefits and costs of a not-so-original idea
91. International Investment Arbitration: Winning, Losing and Why
92. International investment law and decentralized targeted sanctions: an uneasy relationship
93. International investment law and media disputes: a complement to WTO law
94. International investment law, intellectual property and development
95. Investment dispute management: The importance of the domestic dimension
96. Investment facilitation in the WTO: The case for early harvesting
97. Investment incentives and the global competition for capital
98. Investment promotion in the new international context: what is the next frontier and how to get there
99. Investment treaties are about justice
100. Investment treaty law, sustainable development and responsible business conduct:A fact-finding survey
- « Previous
- Next »
- 1
- 2
- 3