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Picture of Daria Davitti

Daria Davitti

Senior lecturer

Picture of Daria Davitti

Proportionality and human rights protection in international investment arbitration : What's left hanging in the balance?

Author

  • Daria Davitti

Summary, in English

This article focuses on the proportionality analysis carried out by international investment tribunals when the protection of foreign investment adversely impacts the protection of human rights. International investment arbitrators are increasingly called to adjudicate awards which require a 'balancing' between the so-called rights of investors, protected as they are by relevant international investment agreements (iia), and the rights of third parties affected by foreign investment. Such balancing often entails, at its core, a controversial juxtaposition between investment protections and human rights protections. In this article, I argue that a balancing between investors' rights and human rights is neither possible nor desirable. This argument is crucial to demystify existing assumptions surrounding the use of balancing and proportionality in international investment arbitration as a way of successfully reconciling competing interests as well as conflicting protection obligations vested upon a host State.

Department/s

  • Public International Law
  • Human Rights Law
  • Department of Law

Publishing year

2020

Language

English

Pages

343-363

Publication/Series

Nordic Journal of International Law

Volume

89

Issue

3-4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Brill

Topic

  • Law (excluding Law and Society)

Keywords

  • Human rights
  • International investment arbitration
  • Managing vulnerability
  • Rights-friendly drafting
  • Systemic integration

Status

Published

Research group

  • Public International Law
  • Human Rights Law

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0902-7351