第一批双边投资条约:美国战后友好、商业和航海条约

K. Vandevelde
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引用次数: 14

摘要

这些是牛津大学出版社于2017年5月出版的《首批双边投资条约:美国战后友谊、商业和航海条约》的第一章和第五章。在查阅美国国家档案馆(National Archives)保存的32,000页谈判历史(以及数千页其他文件)的基础上,这本书追溯了美国战后友谊、商业和航海(FCN)条约项目的历史,包括1776年为解决贸易和海事关系而启动的一系列条约在20世纪40年代末被重新定义为投资条约项目的过程。它描述了这些条约中出现的投资条款的起源和含义,这些条款是当代双边投资条约(BITs)和自由贸易协定(FTAs)中出现的条款的前身。它显示了这些在20世纪40年代末制定的投资条款是如何根植于罗斯福和杜鲁门政府的新政自由主义的。它们的目的是为美国投资者在海外获得类似于美国宪法规定的外国(和国内)投资者在美国所享有的保护。本书还记录了美国战后签署的每一项FCN条约的谈判过程,并描述了美国如何解释每一项与投资相关的条款。第一章是本书的引言。它总结了全书其余部分所描述的事件,解释了参考新政自由主义的含义,并更详细地描述了本书的内容。第五章描述了FCN条约被重新定义为双边投资条约的过程。《第一批双边投资条约:美国战后友好、商业和航海条约》是国际投资协定三部曲的一部分。牛津大学出版社于2009年出版的《美国国际投资协定》全面分析了当前美国投资协定项目的前30年,其中包括双边投资协定和自由贸易协定。它追溯了美国范例双边投资协定中每项条款的演变,解释了这些条款背后的政策,描述了已签署的双边投资协定和自由贸易协定中条款的修改,并综合了解释这些条款的国际仲裁裁决。该书的第一章(“引言”)和第三章(“BIT模式谈判文本的演变”)已分别发布。双边投资协定:牛津大学出版社于2010年出版的《历史、政策与解释》提供了国际投资法的一般理论,认为投资条约基于六个核心原则(非歧视、安全、合理性、正当程序、透明度和准入),并分析了双边投资条约的关键条款,解释了每项条款的结构和政策,追溯了其起源和发展,并综合了解释这些条款的仲裁裁决。它涵盖了从1959年德国与巴基斯坦签订首个双边投资条约到2009年的这段时间,从而对全球BIT项目的前50年进行了总结。这本书的第七章(“非歧视”)和第九章(“准入”)是分开发布的。
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The First Bilateral Investment Treaties: U.S. Postwar Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation Treaties
These are Chapters One and Five of The First Bilateral Investment Treaties: U.S. Postwar Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation Treaties, published by Oxford University Press in May 2017. Based on a review of 32,000 pages of negotiating history housed in the National Archives (as well as thousands of pages of other documents), the book traces the history of the U.S. postwar friendship, commerce, and navigation (FCN) treaty program, including the process by which a treaty series initiated in 1776 to address trade and maritime relations was reconceptualized in the late 1940s as a program of investment treaties. It describes the origins and meaning of the investment provisions that appeared in these treaties, provisions that are the precursors to the provisions that appear in contemporary bilateral investment treaties (BITs) and free trade agreements (FTAs) with investment provisions. It shows how these investment provisions, formulated in the late 1940s, were rooted in the New Deal liberalism of the Roosevelt and Truman administrations. They were intended to obtain for U.S. investors abroad protections similar to those already enjoyed by foreign (and domestic) investors in the United States under the U.S. Constitution. The book also includes an account of the negotiation of each postwar FCN treaty signed by the United States and a description of how each investment-related provision was interpreted by the United States. Chapter One is the Introduction to the book. It summarizes the events that are described throughout the remainder of the book, explains what is meant by references to New Deal liberalism, and describes in more detail the contents of the book. Chapter Five describes the process by which the FCN treaties were reconceptualized as bilateral investment treaties. The First Bilateral Investment Treaties: U.S. Postwar Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation Treaties is part of a trilogy of books on international investment agreements. U.S. International Investment Agreements, published by Oxford University Press in 2009, presents a comprehensive analysis of the first 30 years of the current U.S. investment treaty program, including both BITs and FTAs with investment chapters. It traces the evolution of each provision in the U.S. model BITs, explains the policies underlying those provisions, describes modifications to the provisions in the signed BITs and FTAs, and synthesizes the international arbitral awards interpreting the provisions. Chapters One (“Introduction�?) and Three (“The Evolution of the BIT Model Negotiating Text�?) of that book have been posted separately. Bilateral Investment Treaties: History, Policy, and Interpretation, published by Oxford University Press in 2010, provides a general theory of international investment law, arguing that investment treaties are based on six core principles (nondiscrimination, security, reasonableness, due process, transparency and access), and analyzes the key provisions of BITs, explaining the structure and policy of each provision, tracing its origins and development, and synthesizing the arbitral awards interpreting it. It covers the period from 1959, when Germany concluded its first bilateral investment treaty with Pakistan, through 2009, and thus provides a summary of the first 50 years of BIT programs worldwide. Chapters Seven (“Nondiscrimination�?) and Nine (“Access�?) of that book have been posted separately.
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