Essays about: "Indirect expropriation"
Found 5 essays containing the words Indirect expropriation.
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1. Protections Against Direct and Indirect Expropriation - How the United States and the European Union use Sanctions and Bilateral Investment Treaties to Protect Intellectual Property
University essay from Lunds universitet/Institutionen för handelsrättAbstract : This paper presents an overview of how the United States and the European Union use their sanctions and Bilateral Investment Treaty policies to protect intellectual property rights overseas from expropriation. Both territories’ policies vary, with American rightsholders more capable of protecting their overseas intellectual property through the United States’ sanctions policy; European Union investors, conversely, are more likely to benefit from Bilateral Investment Treaties signed by the Member States and third countries. READ MORE
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2. The Relationship Between International Investment Arbitration and Environmental Protection: Charting the Inherent Shortcomings
University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionen; Lunds universitet/Juridiska fakultetenAbstract : Approximately 3000 international investment agreements (IIAs), mostly bilateral investment treaties, have been designed since the 1960’s to promote and protect foreign investment across the world. In case of a dispute, the agreements provide for investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) in an arbitration tribunal. READ MORE
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3. Clash of the Titans : A study of the interaction between environmental regulations and foreign investment protection in the context of indirect expropriation
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Juridiska institutionenAbstract : .... READ MORE
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4. The Role of "Effect" and "Intention" of State's Measure in Determining an Indirect Expropriation : With a Focus on State's Liability for Compensation
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Juridiska institutionenAbstract : .... READ MORE
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5. Regulatory expropriation under international investment law - A case-law analysis
University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionenAbstract : While regulatory measures are commonly imposed by states for social, environmental, economical or other reasons and are universally accepted as a part of state sovereignty, they may in various ways adversely affect the interests of foreign investments. Current debates under international investment law centre on whether and when such state interferences, although involving no transfer of legal title from the individual owner to the state, should be regarded as compensatory so called indirect or regulatory expropriations. READ MORE