Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims

Today it is widely recognised that international investment activities can bring significant economic benefits for host countries. To promote a favourable investment climate, international organisations were set up to facilitate the settlement of foreign investment disputes, or to provide financial...

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Main Author: Lin, Wei-Chung
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33652/
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author Lin, Wei-Chung
author_facet Lin, Wei-Chung
author_sort Lin, Wei-Chung
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Today it is widely recognised that international investment activities can bring significant economic benefits for host countries. To promote a favourable investment climate, international organisations were set up to facilitate the settlement of foreign investment disputes, or to provide financial insurance for investors against non-commercial risks. Moreover, international financial institutions offer finance for governments or private enterprises to implement investment projects. States have also concluded international investment agreements to provide guarantees on the treatment and protection of foreign investors. Meanwhile, however, these investment activities can also create environmental problems for host countries and lead to human suffering. As states have been generally reluctant to take the initiative to secure effective implementation of environmental rules at the international level, allowing entities other than states to make environmental claims before international dispute settlement mechanisms offers practical approaches to protecting community interests and ensuring the fulfillment of international environmental standards in the course of international investment activities. This thesis considers the extent to which civil society organisations (CSOs) can promote, and have indeed promoted, environmental considerations in settling investment-related environmental claims through alternative means of dispute resolution on the international plane. It explores how CSOs have brought environmental perspectives in response to adverse impacts arising from investment activities. It also evaluates the implications of their claims for resolving relevant environmental issues and promoting compliance with international environmental standards during investment activities.
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spelling nottingham-336522025-02-28T13:28:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33652/ Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims Lin, Wei-Chung Today it is widely recognised that international investment activities can bring significant economic benefits for host countries. To promote a favourable investment climate, international organisations were set up to facilitate the settlement of foreign investment disputes, or to provide financial insurance for investors against non-commercial risks. Moreover, international financial institutions offer finance for governments or private enterprises to implement investment projects. States have also concluded international investment agreements to provide guarantees on the treatment and protection of foreign investors. Meanwhile, however, these investment activities can also create environmental problems for host countries and lead to human suffering. As states have been generally reluctant to take the initiative to secure effective implementation of environmental rules at the international level, allowing entities other than states to make environmental claims before international dispute settlement mechanisms offers practical approaches to protecting community interests and ensuring the fulfillment of international environmental standards in the course of international investment activities. This thesis considers the extent to which civil society organisations (CSOs) can promote, and have indeed promoted, environmental considerations in settling investment-related environmental claims through alternative means of dispute resolution on the international plane. It explores how CSOs have brought environmental perspectives in response to adverse impacts arising from investment activities. It also evaluates the implications of their claims for resolving relevant environmental issues and promoting compliance with international environmental standards during investment activities. 2016-07-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33652/1/Wei_Chung_Lin.pdf Lin, Wei-Chung (2016) Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. environment environmental law international civil society investment-related
spellingShingle environment
environmental
law
international
civil society
investment-related
Lin, Wei-Chung
Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims
title Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims
title_full Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims
title_fullStr Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims
title_full_unstemmed Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims
title_short Defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims
title_sort defending the environment: civil society participation in resolving investment-related environmental claims
topic environment
environmental
law
international
civil society
investment-related
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33652/