International investment law and its others
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International investment law protects rights of investors, but its application often implicates public interests protected by human rights law, environmental law and/or domestic public law. The interaction between ‘international investment law and its others’ has prompted much debate recently and has revealed a considerable degree of uncertainty. The contributions to the present volume systematically address the most important aspects of the interaction. They show that investment protection can indeed have a negative impact on human rights, environmental law and domestic law. However, the interaction is not a one-way street: international investment law is not sealed off, but increasingly open to arguments based on human rights, environmental law and domestic law. In engaging with these arguments, investment law itself changes: it is not monolithic, but responds to the challenge of ‘its others’. Mit Beiträgen von: Alessandra Asteriti, Glasgow; Isabel Feichtner, Frankfurt; David Gaukrodger, Paris; Tarcisio Gazzini; Amsterdam; Christoph Hölken, Cologne; Rainer Hofmann, Frankfurt; Marc Jacob, Heidelberg; Markus Krajewski, Erlangen-Nürnberg; Nikos Lavranos, The Hague; Francisco Orrego Vicuña, Santiago de Chile/London; Monika Polzin, Augsburg; Yannick Radi, Leiden; Pavel Šturma, Prague; Christian J. Tams, Glasgow; Valentina S. Vadi, Maastricht