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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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42. Land investments and human rights: how home countries can do more
43. Mining automation: threat or opportunity for FDI technology spillovers?
44. Not all foreign direct investment is foreign: the extent of round-tripping
45. Preferential investment liberalization under bilateral investment treaties: How to ensure compliance with WTO law?
46. The International Investment Law and Policy Regime: Challenges and Options
47. The TPP’s Investment Chapter: Entrenching, Rather Than Reforming, a Flawed System
48. The Trans-Pacific Partnership investment chapter sets a new worldwide standard
49. Toward balanced Arab regional investment regulations
50. TPP投资章节树立了全球新标准
51. Untangling the effects of “special purpose entities” on global FDI
52. Using investor-state dispute settlement to enforce investor obligations
53. 为何发达国家企业更青睐中国收购者
54. 国际投资协定中基于安全利益单边裁决条款的兴起
55. 从出口加工到知识处理:升级FDI促进工具
56. From export processing to knowledge processing: upgrading the FDI promotion toolkit
57. Outcome Report of Workshop on International Investment and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
58. The E15 Task Force on Investment Policy
59. The rise of self-judging essential security interest clauses in international investment agreements
60. Why some advanced economy firms prefer to be taken over by Chinese acquirers
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