Book contents
- The Legitimacy of Investment Arbitration
- Studies on International Courts and Tribunals
- The Legitimacy of Investment Arbitration
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: The Legitimacy Crisis and the Empirical Turn
- 2 The International Investment Regime and Its Discontents
- Part I Process Legitimacy
- Part II Process Legitimacy
- Part III Output Legitimacy
- Part IV Legitimation Strategies
- 15 Does International Arbitration Enfeeble or Enhance Local Legal Institutions?
- 16 Learning from Investment Treaty Law and Arbitration: Developing States and Power Inequalities
- 17 Legitimation through Modification: Do States Seek More Regulatory Space in Their Investment Agreements?
- Index
15 - Does International Arbitration Enfeeble or Enhance Local Legal Institutions?
from Part IV - Legitimation Strategies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2022
- The Legitimacy of Investment Arbitration
- Studies on International Courts and Tribunals
- The Legitimacy of Investment Arbitration
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: The Legitimacy Crisis and the Empirical Turn
- 2 The International Investment Regime and Its Discontents
- Part I Process Legitimacy
- Part II Process Legitimacy
- Part III Output Legitimacy
- Part IV Legitimation Strategies
- 15 Does International Arbitration Enfeeble or Enhance Local Legal Institutions?
- 16 Learning from Investment Treaty Law and Arbitration: Developing States and Power Inequalities
- 17 Legitimation through Modification: Do States Seek More Regulatory Space in Their Investment Agreements?
- Index
Summary
There is a critique that investment arbitration undermines or hampers the development of national legal institutions. By providing a forum for foreign investors separate and distinct from local courts, critics argue, ISDS removes any incentive for foreign investors to promote the development of local legal institutions. This chapter sets out an account of how investment arbitration might affect development of local legal institutions, in particular international commercial arbitration and, perhaps, domestic arbitration. The authors find that while both the number of investment agreements and investment arbitration proceedings to which a state is a party is negatively related to the rule of law in the state, the presence of an indicator for support for international commercial arbitration – adoption of the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration – essentially offsets that negative relationship.
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- Information
- The Legitimacy of Investment ArbitrationEmpirical Perspectives, pp. 467 - 500Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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