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Begin New Search You searched for: Topic Economics Remove constraint Topic: Economics Content Type Policy Brief Remove constraint Content Type: Policy Brief Publishing Institution Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment Remove constraint Publishing Institution: Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment Publication Year within 25 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 25 Years

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1. Regional concentration of FDI involves trade-offs in post-reform India

2. Multilateral investment disciplines: Don't forget the GATS

3. The case for a framework agreement on investment

4. The "spaghetti bowl" of IIAs: The end of history?

5. Recalibrating interpretive authority

6. The China-United States BIT negotiations: A Chinese perspective

7. Perspectives on topical foreign direct investment issues

8. Which host country government actors are most involved in disputes with foreign investors?

9. China needs to complement its "going-out" policy with a "going-in" strategy

10. The rise of FDI income, and what it means for the balance of payments of developing countries

11. Government-held equity in foreign investment projects: Good for host countries?

12. The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership: A critical perspective

13. Perspectives on topical foreign direct investment issues

14. Toward a multilateral framework for investment

15. The futile debate over a multilateral framework for investment

16. The need for an international investment consensus-building process

17. Cost allocation in investment arbitration: Back toward diversification

18. Toward a multilateral framework for investment

19. Are trade-law inspired investment rules desirable?

20. Beware the discretionary choices of arbitrators

21. Lessons from South Africa's BITs review

22. Achieving sustainable development objectives in international investment: Could future IIAs impose sustainable development-related obligations on investors?

23. Go out and manufacture: Policy support for Chinese FDI in Africa

24. Three challenges for China's outward FDI policy

25. EU investment agreements and the search for a new balance: A paradigm shift from laissez-faireliberalism toward embedded liberalism?

26. Nation states and nationality of MNEs

27. Towards the successful implementation of the updated OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises

28. FDI stocks are a biased measure of MNE affiliate activity: A response

29. Is China's outward investment in oil a global security concern?

30. State-controlled entities as "investors" under international investment agreements

31. Absent from the discussion: The other half of investment promotion

32. Reconciling IMF rules and international investment agreements: An innovative derogation for capital controls

33. A new economic nationalism? Lessons from the PotashCorp decision in Canada

34. A good business reason to support mandatory transparency in extractive industries

35. Attracting FDI through BITs and RTAs: Does treaty content matter?

36. Starting anew in international investment law

37. Law at two speeds: Legal frameworks regulating foreign investment in the global South

38. Roll out the red carpet and they will come: Investment promotion and FDI inflows

39. Much ado about nothing? State-controlled entities and the change in German investment law

40. A China – US bilateral investment treaty: A template for a multilateral framework for investment?

41. Inward foreign direct investment: Does it enable or constrain domestic technology entrepreneurship?

42. Evaluate Sustainable FDI to Promote Sustainable Development

43. Is Chinese FDI pushing Latin America into natural resources?

44. The unbalanced dragon: China's uneven provincial and regional FDI performance

45. Different investment treaties, different effects

46. National companies or foreign affiliates: Whose contribution to growth is greater?

47. The (lack of) women arbitrators in investment treaty arbitration

48. The public law challenge: Killing or rethinking international investment law?

49. The standing of state-controlled entities under the ICSID Convention: Two key considerations

50. State-controlled entities control nearly US$ 2 trillion in foreign assets