Poor States or Poor Governance? Explaining Outcomes in Investment Treaty Arbitration

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 Q4 LAW Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business Pub Date : 2016-03-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2740516
D. Behn, Tarald Laudal Berge, M. Langford
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

Critics of the international investment regime have claimed that its institution of arbitration is biased against developing states. Others have countered by arguing that any difference in treatment is better explained by the lack of democratic governance in developing states. This paper uses the largest dataset on concluded investment treaty arbitrations compiled to date to test these competing assertions of development bias and governance conflation. Beginning with a theoretical framework for both hypotheses, it argues that we need to disaggregate the potential causal mechanism, which includes replacing the idea of democratic governance with that of governmental quality. Empirically, the paper finds that the development status of a respondent state is a consistently powerful and statistically significant explanation of investment treaty arbitration outcome. Even after the introduction of a range of control variables and finely-tuned quality of governance variables, poorer states remain vastly more likely to lose in arbitration than wealthier states. However, some caution is needed in interpreting these results and more precise research is needed on competing development bias theories.
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贫穷的国家还是糟糕的治理?投资条约仲裁结果解释
国际投资制度的批评者声称,其仲裁制度对发展中国家有偏见。其他人反驳说,任何待遇上的差异都可以用发展中国家缺乏民主治理来更好地解释。本文使用迄今为止编制的关于已结案投资条约仲裁的最大数据集来测试这些关于发展偏见和治理合并的相互竞争的断言。从这两个假设的理论框架开始,它认为我们需要分解潜在的因果机制,其中包括用政府质量的概念取代民主治理的概念。实证研究发现,被投诉人国家的发展状况对投资条约仲裁结果的解释具有一致性和统计学意义。即使在引入一系列控制变量和微调治理变量质量之后,较贫穷的国家在仲裁中仍然比较富裕的国家更有可能失败。然而,在解释这些结果时需要谨慎一些,需要对与之竞争的发展偏见理论进行更精确的研究。
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CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
期刊介绍: The Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business is a student-run, student-edited publication of the Northwestern University School of Law. First published in 1979, JILB is dedicated to the analysis of transnational and international laws and their effects on private entities. The Journal’s substantive focus—private international law and business—distinguishes it from many other publications in the international field. JILB publishes three issues annually and is circulated to practitioners, professors, and libraries around the world. Articles published in the Journal are written by prominent scholars and practitioners. These articles analyze significant questions and current issues in private international law. The Journal also publishes student-written notes and comments that are of scholarly length and quality.
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