Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary Principle

The proliferation of bilateral investment treaties and investment chapters in trade megatreaties and the associated increase in the preference of investors for investor-state dispute settlement has given rise to concerns that the regulatory sovereignty of both developed and developing states might b...

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Main Author: Davies Haydn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-12-01
Series:British Journal of American Legal Studies
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/bjals-2016-0016
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spelling doaj-6cd141fcb96f4bd2a7138f8ff7087e612021-09-05T20:42:28ZengSciendoBritish Journal of American Legal Studies2049-40922016-12-015244948610.1515/bjals-2016-0016bjals-2016-0016Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary PrincipleDavies Haydn0Birmingham City University, UKThe proliferation of bilateral investment treaties and investment chapters in trade megatreaties and the associated increase in the preference of investors for investor-state dispute settlement has given rise to concerns that the regulatory sovereignty of both developed and developing states might be compromised. In response to these concerns many trade agreements (including the recently concluded Comprehensive Economic Trade Agreement between the European Union (EU) and Canada) have incorporated provisions designed to protect the regulatory sovereignty of nation states, especially in relation to labour standards, public health, phytosanitary and environmental protection. This paper examines the nature and scope of environmental protection measures in investment chapters and attempts to analyse the extent to which these measures will, in practice, prevent challenges by investors seeking to chill or prevent environmental regulations which might threaten their investments. The analysis concentrates particularly on measures based on the precautionary principle and uses the current EU restrictions on neonicotinoid pesticides as a case study. The paper concludes that the measures included in investment chapters designed to prevent such challenges by investors will not necessarily achieve the desired level of protection for environmental regulatory sovereignty.https://doi.org/10.1515/bjals-2016-0016
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Davies Haydn
spellingShingle Davies Haydn
Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary Principle
British Journal of American Legal Studies
author_facet Davies Haydn
author_sort Davies Haydn
title Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary Principle
title_short Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary Principle
title_full Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary Principle
title_fullStr Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary Principle
title_full_unstemmed Investor-State Dispute Settlement and the Future of the Precautionary Principle
title_sort investor-state dispute settlement and the future of the precautionary principle
publisher Sciendo
series British Journal of American Legal Studies
issn 2049-4092
publishDate 2016-12-01
description The proliferation of bilateral investment treaties and investment chapters in trade megatreaties and the associated increase in the preference of investors for investor-state dispute settlement has given rise to concerns that the regulatory sovereignty of both developed and developing states might be compromised. In response to these concerns many trade agreements (including the recently concluded Comprehensive Economic Trade Agreement between the European Union (EU) and Canada) have incorporated provisions designed to protect the regulatory sovereignty of nation states, especially in relation to labour standards, public health, phytosanitary and environmental protection. This paper examines the nature and scope of environmental protection measures in investment chapters and attempts to analyse the extent to which these measures will, in practice, prevent challenges by investors seeking to chill or prevent environmental regulations which might threaten their investments. The analysis concentrates particularly on measures based on the precautionary principle and uses the current EU restrictions on neonicotinoid pesticides as a case study. The paper concludes that the measures included in investment chapters designed to prevent such challenges by investors will not necessarily achieve the desired level of protection for environmental regulatory sovereignty.
url https://doi.org/10.1515/bjals-2016-0016
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