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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. 中国在国际投资协定中的“新常态”
53. 国际投资法律咨询中心的案例
54. 变化的格局:亚洲国家作为全球投资规则制定者的前景
55. 环太平洋地区:国际投资法律趋同化的平台
56. 略论多边或诸边投资框架的建立
57. 双边投资条约下的优先投资自由化: 如何确保符合世贸组织的规定?
58. 趋向平衡的阿拉伯区域投资法规
59. 国际直接投资法律和分散化的有针对性的制裁: 一种不稳定的关系
60. 经济发展组织新的国际直接投资记账方法
61. 为什么民主国家能够达成更为严谨的国际投资协议?
62. 采掘业自动化:对于国际直接投资的技术溢出,威胁还是机遇?
63. 土地投资与人权:母国能做些什么?
64. 国际投资体制的系统性改革大纲
65. 并非所有外国直接投资都是外来的:返程投资的规模
66. A new foreign direct investment accounting methodology for economic development organizations
67. An outline for systematic reform of the investment law regime
68. Can India emulate China in attracting and benefitting from FDI?
69. ChAFTA新制度:利用条约缔约方联合控制以保障公共福利规制
70. Changing geography: prospects for Asian actors as global rule-makers in international investment law
71. China’s “new normal” in international investment agreements
72. Chinese FDI in the EU: learning from the renewable energy sector
73. Democracies conclude more and stricter international investment agreements – but why?
74. 中国对欧FDI:从可再生能源领域学到的经验
75. 吸引并受益于FDI:印度能够赶超中国吗?
76. 消除特殊目的实体对 FDI 的影响
77. International investment law and decentralized targeted sanctions: an uneasy relationship
78. Land investments and human rights: how home countries can do more
79. Mining automation: threat or opportunity for FDI technology spillovers?
80. Not all foreign direct investment is foreign: the extent of round-tripping
81. Preferential investment liberalization under bilateral investment treaties: How to ensure compliance with WTO law?
82. Protecting public welfare regulation through joint treaty party control: a ChAFTA innovation
83. The case for a multilateral or plurilateral framework on investment
84. The case for an advisory center on international investment law
85. The Pacific Rim as a platform for international investment law harmonization
86. Toward balanced Arab regional investment regulations
87. Untangling the effects of “special purpose entities” on global FDI
88. Using investor-state dispute settlement to enforce investor obligations
89. FDI and CSR to promote social entrepreneurship and sustainable FDI: Lessons from India
90. Promoting responsible business through the revised ILO Tripartite Declaration
91. Protecting FDI contributing to host countries’ development:The rise of the “forgotten” Salini criterion as part of the definition of investment
92. Advancing alternatives: Promoting mediation and conciliation in investor-state dispute settlement
93. Advancing climate-change goals: From reactive to proactive systemic integration
94. A managed dispute-resolution insurance scheme for countries in investor-state arbitration: Ensuring early legal representation of respondents
95. An Advisory Centre on International Investment Law: Is perfect the enemy of good?
96. BEPS reform: The end of fiscal incentives to attract FDI?
97. Defining investment in a future WTO agreement on investment facilitation for development
98. Denying the benefits of the Energy Charter Treaty: Shifting the policy or just the burden of proof?
99. FDI and sustainable development in the EU-China investment treaty: Neither high nor low, just realistic expectations
100. Got “critical minerals”? Hooray! But be careful!
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