双边投资条约与投资者的社会责任:南亚的法律与实践

IF 1 Q2 LAW
Sai Ramani Garimella, Soumya Rajsingh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的国际投资法管理与跨国投资有关的事务。跨国公司(TNCs)的广泛影响力赋予了它们巨大的经济、政治和社会影响力,往往使它们与公共利益问题交织在一起,并对侵犯人权行为产生影响。本文旨在探讨跨国公司在当今全球化世界中施加的深远影响及其在国际投资法框架内对人权和社会责任的影响。特别是,本文认识到经济薄弱的南亚国家的脆弱性,并列举了过去发生的严重侵犯人权事件,如印度的博帕尔毒气悲剧和孟加拉国的拉纳广场灾难。本文以南亚双边投资条约 (BIT) 为重点,旨在研究投资者社会责任的范围。它将对仲裁法庭的判例进行分析,以了解它们关于将社会责任义务纳入国际投资协定(IIAs)的讨论情况。此外,本报告还对南亚双边投资条约中公司与社会问责有关的义务的性质进行了定量分析。研究结果研究结果表明,关于投资者社会问责的法律明显缺失,需要加强监管机制,以应对跨国公司对人权和社会权利不断升级的影响。缺乏强有力的法律框架,再加上国际投资法的不对称性质,即与国家相比,投资者拥有更大的权利和影响力,加剧了这一挑战。监管冷淡 "现象阻碍了国家有效执行旨在保护人权和环境的监管措施。此外,投资法庭对 "公正和公平待遇 "等条款的广义解释往往削弱了国家实施符合公共利益的措施的能力。虽然联合国贸发会议和联合国国际贸易法委员会第三工作组等国际组织正在积极讨论国际投资协定的改革问题,但现有的投资者社会责任准则在内容和与国际人权法结合的方法上都非常欠缺。研究结果突出表明,南亚国家--本研究的实证分析对象--必须采取一种综合方法,既要进行国内法改革,促进企业的社会责任,又要积极开展谈判,将对投资者具有约束力的社会义务纳入国际投资协定。据作者所知,还没有其他研究分析过南亚双边投资协定中投资者社会责任的范围。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bilateral investment treaties and investors’ social accountability: the law and praxis in South Asia

Purpose

International investment law governs matters related to transnational investments. The extensive reach of transnational corporations (TNCs) has granted them substantial economic, political and social influence, often intertwining them with public interest issues and implications in human rights violations. This paper aims to explore the profound influence exerted by TNCs in today’s globalized world and its implications for human rights and social responsibility within the framework of international investment law. Particularly, it acknowledges the vulnerability of economically weak South Asian states and cites past instances such as the Bhopal gas tragedy in India and the Rana Plaza disaster in Bangladesh as egregious violations of human rights. Focusing on South Asian bilateral investment treaties (BITs), this paper aims to examine the scope of investors’ social accountability.

Design/methodology/approach

This research engages with doctrinal and analytical methods in traversing through primary and secondary sources. It would parse the arbitral tribunals’ jurisprudence for their discussion on the inclusion of social accountability obligations within international investment agreements (IIAs). Further, it engages in a quantitative analysis related to the nature of the social accountability-related obligation of the corporation within South Asian BITs.

Findings

The findings reveal a glaring absence of the law on investors’ social accountability and the need for enhanced regulatory mechanisms to address the escalating influence of TNCs on human and social rights. The absence of a robust legal framework, coupled with the asymmetric nature of international investment law, granting investors greater rights and leverage compared to states, exacerbates this challenge. The phenomenon of “regulatory chill” inhibits states from effectively enforcing regulatory measures aimed at protecting human rights and the environment. Furthermore, the broad interpretation of clauses such as “fair and equitable treatment” by investment tribunals often undermines states’ ability to implement measures in the public interest. While international organizations such as the UNCTAD and the UNCITRAL Working Group III are actively discussing reforms to IIAs, the existing guidelines addressing investors’ social accountability are woefully lacking in the content as well as the method of their integration with international human rights law. The findings underscore the imperative for South Asian nations, the subject of this research’s empirical analysis, to adopt a comprehensive approach involving both domestic law reforms to promote corporate social accountability and active pursuit of negotiations for the inclusion of binding social obligations for investors within IIAs.

Practical Implications

This research, drawing upon international law developments, offers suggestions for incorporation of social accountability provisions via relevant domestic law reform. The research could be viewed as a prelude for mapping the legal developments in the area of investors’ social accountability within investment agreements, as well as investment contracts, drawing guidance from international law instruments.

Originality/Value

To the best of the authors’ knowledge, no other study analysed the scope of investors’ social accountability in South Asian BITs.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of International Trade Law and Policy is a peer reviewed interdisciplinary journal with a focus upon the nexus of international economic policy and international economic law. It is receptive, but not limited, to the methods of economics, law, and the social sciences. As scholars tend to read individual articles of particular interest to them, rather than an entire issue, authors are not required to write with full accessibility to readers from all disciplines within the purview of the Journal. However, interdisciplinary communication should be fostered where possible. Thus economists can utilize quantitative methods (including econometrics and statistics), while legal scholars and political scientists can invoke specialized techniques and theories. Appendices are encouraged for more technical material. Submissions should contribute to understanding international economic policy and the institutional/legal architecture in which it is implemented. Submissions can be conceptual (theoretical) and/or empirical and/or doctrinal in content. Topics of interest to the Journal are expected to evolve over time but include: -All aspects of international trade law and policy -All aspects of international investment law and policy -All aspects of international development law and policy -All aspects of international financial law and policy -Relationship between economic policy and law and other societal concerns, including the human rights, environment, health, development, and national security
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