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ttp://ccsi.columbia.edu/ publications/columbia-fdi-
perspectives.
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*Columbia FDI Perspectives*
Perspectives on topical foreign direct investment issues
No. 282  July 13, 2020
Editor-in-Chief: Karl P. Sauvant ([log in to unmask])
Managing Editor: Alexa Busser ([log in to unmask])
*Investment and human rights: Is there an elephant in the room?*
<http://ccsi.columbia.edu/publications/columbia-fdi-perspectives/?utm_source=CCSI+Mailing+List&utm_campaign=1e5ebeb1c2-Perspective+282&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a61bf1d34a-1e5ebeb1c2->
*
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn1>
by
Anna de Luca and Angelica Bonfanti**
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn2>

Insufficient integration between investment and human rights law is a
concern recurrently being raised about the investment regime. However, the
UNCITRAL debate on investor-state dispute-settlement (ISDS) reform focuses
on procedural aspects. This concern is therefore an elephant in the room,
where counterclaims by respondent countries are the only connected topic
indirectly touched upon at the moment.[1]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn3>

Permitting free-standing counterclaims (namely, counterclaims relying on
the same factual matrix of the original claims, but grounded in different
legal bases than the international investment agreements (IIAs) themselves)
would contribute to rebalancing IIAs’ asymmetrical character. Such
counterclaims, as opposed to defensive counterclaims, would allow tribunals
to take a holistic approach to disputes, and to adjudicate, alongside
countries’ breaches of IIAs, the consequences of investors’ non-compliance
with human rights obligations. This would promote “procedural efficiency,
fairness, and the rule of law.”[2]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn4>

Countries’ ability to file free-standing counterclaims depends on specific
procedural and substantive provisions. Absent such provisions,
counterclaims legally unrelated to investors’ claims of treaty breach, but
factually connected therewith, are inadmissible. Exceptions occur either
when parties have entered into a related specific agreement[3]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn5>
or, as in *Urbaser*
<https://www.italaw.com/sites/default/files/case-documents/italaw8136_1.pdf?utm_source=CCSI+Mailing+List&utm_campaign=1e5ebeb1c2-Perspective+282&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a61bf1d34a-1e5ebeb1c2->
and *Aven*
<https://www.italaw.com/sites/default/files/case-documents/italaw9955_0.pdf?utm_source=CCSI+Mailing+List&utm_campaign=1e5ebeb1c2-Perspective+282&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a61bf1d34a-1e5ebeb1c2->,
ISDS clauses allow either investors or countries to resort to ISDS.
However, even in the above cases, counterclaims have been dismissed. The
very same argument justifying counterclaims’ admissibility—that “it can no
longer be admitted that companies operating internationally are immune from
becoming subjects of international law,”[4]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn6>
including human rights obligations—is the main factor causing their
dismissal: the nature of human rights obligations as inter-state primary
obligations makes it impossible to merely shift them from countries to
corporations.[5]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn7>

Thus, based on the argument that corporations are subjects of international
law with human rights obligations, counterclaims have been rather
inoperative until now. Whether physical and legal persons are objects—or,
rather, subjects—of international law is a traditional distinction “not
particularly helpful, either intellectually or operationally,”[6]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn8>
as the domestic jurisprudence of different countries—often contradictory on
this point—demonstrates.[7]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn9>

To promote international justice, countries’ right to counterclaim should
be given a tangible legal basis, going beyond foreign investors’ general
duty to respect host countries’ laws and the putative inadmissibility of
their ISDS claims in case of breach thereof. This innovation would
contribute to better integration of investment and human rights law,
especially if legislation on human rights protection from corporate abuses
is contextually established by both home and host countries. This objective
is now being pursued by a UN treaty project “to regulate, in international
human rights law, the activities of transnational corporations and other
business enterprises.”[8]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__edn10>

The draft treaty covers all business activities, domestic and transnational
(art. 3), and requires countries to prevent and address human rights
violations of enterprises, domestically and abroad. Such an approach,
covering, without distinction, domestic and transnational corporate human
rights abuses, is very promising. Pursuant to the project, home and host
state parties shall regulate effectively the activities of business
enterprises within their territories or jurisdictions, including their
transnational activities, and require them to establish human rights due
diligence processes, i.e., mechanisms that identify, assess, prevent, and
monitor any actual or potential human rights violations that may arise from
corporate business activities (art. 5). Moreover, state parties shall
establish systems of legal liability (either criminal,civil or
administrative) for human rights violations occurring in the context of
business activities (art. 6) and effective mechanisms for the enforcement
of national or foreign judgments or awards in this field. They might also
require business operators to maintain financial guarantees to cover
victims’ potential claims of compensation, and give victims the possibility
to choose among different fora for filing their claims: home and host
country courts, alongside country-based non-judicial grievance mechanisms
(art. 4.8). Finally, other agreements (including IIAs) shall be compatible
and interpreted in accordance with this treaty (art. 12.6).They might also
require business operators to maintain financial guarantees to cover
victims’ potential claims of compensation, and give victims the possibility
to choose among different fora for filing their claims: home and host
country courts, alongside country-based non-judicial grievance mechanisms
(art. 4.8). Finally, other agreements (including IIAs) shall be compatible
and interpreted in accordance with this treaty (art. 12.6).They might also
require business operators to maintain financial guarantees to cover
victims’ potential claims of compensation, and give victims the possibility
to choose among different fora for filing their claims: home and host
country courts, alongside country-based non-judicial grievance mechanisms
(art. 4.8). Finally, other agreements (including IIAs) shall be compatible
and interpreted in accordance with this treaty (art. 12.6).other agreements
(including IIAs) shall be compatible and interpreted in accordance with
this treaty (art. 12.6).other agreements (including IIAs) shall be
compatible and interpreted in accordance with this treaty (art. 12.6).

Alleged grave violations of human rights by MNEs in host countries are
recurring events. Against this backdrop, the possible interplay between
free-standing counterclaims and the above developments deserves the utmost
consideration, in light of its positive contribution to human rights’
effective compliance by home and host countries and national and
multinational enterprises.

------------------------------
*
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref1>
*The
Columbia FDI Perspectives are a forum for public debate. The views
expressed by the author(s) do not reflect the opinions of CCSI or Columbia
University or our partners and supporters. Columbia FDI Perspectives (ISSN
2158-3579) is a peer-reviewed series.*
**
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref2>
Anna de Luca ([log in to unmask]) is Of Counsel at Macchi di
Cellere Gangemi and conciliator at ICSID; Angelica Bonfanti (
[log in to unmask]) is Associate Professor of International Law at
the University of Milan. The authors wish to thank Laurence Boisson de
Chazournes and Stephan Schill for their helpful comments and Kinda
Mohamadieh, Peter Muchlinski and Federico Ortino for their helpful peer
reviews.
[1]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref3>
UNCITRAL
Working Group III (Investor-State Dispute Settlement Reform),* Possible
Reform of Investor-State Dispute Settlement* (Vienna: UNCITRAL, 2018),
paras. 4 and 7.
<https://www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/workinggroups/wg_3/WGIII-36th-session/149_main_paper_7_September_DRAFT.pdf?utm_source=CCSI+Mailing+List&utm_campaign=1e5ebeb1c2-Perspective+282&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a61bf1d34a-1e5ebeb1c2->
[2]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref4>
UNCITRAL,
op. cit., para. 5.
<https://www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/workinggroups/wg_3/WGIII-36th-session/149_main_paper_7_September_DRAFT.pdf?utm_source=CCSI+Mailing+List&utm_campaign=1e5ebeb1c2-Perspective+282&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a61bf1d34a-1e5ebeb1c2->
[3]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref5>
*Burlington
Resources Inc. v. Ecuador*, ICSID Case No. ARB/08/5, Decision on Ecuador’s
Counterclaims (Feb. 7, 2017), paras. 60–62.
<https://www.italaw.com/sites/default/files/case-documents/italaw8206.pdf?utm_source=CCSI+Mailing+List&utm_campaign=1e5ebeb1c2-Perspective+282&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a61bf1d34a-1e5ebeb1c2->
[4]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref6>
*Urbaser
S.A. and others v. Argentina*, ICSID Case No. ARB/07/26, Award (Dec. 8,
2016), para. 1202; *Aven and others v. Republic of Costa Rica*, ICSID Case
No. UNCT/15/3, Award (Sep. 18, 2018), para. 738.
[5]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref7>
*Urbaser* , para. 1210; *Aven* , para. 743.
[6]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref8>
Rosalyn Higgins, “Conceptual thinking about the individual in international
law,” *British Journal of International Studies*, vol.  4 (1978), pp. 1–19,
5.
[7]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref9>
Compare US Supreme Court, *Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co.*, 569 U.S.
108 (2013), with Supreme Court of Canada, *Nevsun Resources Ltd. v. Araya*,
2020 SCC 5 (2020).
[8]
<#m_-8513944821406676086_m_3625572654831515931_m_-3608549314864688930__ednref10>
UN
Open-Ended Intergovernmental Working Group (OEIGWG), *Legally Binding
Instrument to Regulate, in International Human Rights Law, the Activities
of Transnational Corporations and Other Business Enterprises*, Draft
(Geneva: OEIGWG, 2019), p. 1.
<https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/HRBodies/HRCouncil/WGTransCorp/OEIGWG_RevisedDraft_LBI.pdf?utm_source=CCSI+Mailing+List&utm_campaign=1e5ebeb1c2-Perspective+282&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a61bf1d34a-1e5ebeb1c2->
*The material in this Perspective may be reprinted if accompanied by the
following acknowledgment: “Anna de Luca and Angelica Bonfanti, ‘Investment
and human rights: Is there an elephant in the room?,’ Columbia FDI
Perspectives, July 13, 2020. Reprinted with permission from the Columbia
Center on Sustainable Investment (**www.ccsi.columbia.edu*
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*Perspectives*, please contact: Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment,
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*Other relevant CCSI news and announcements*

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Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
Columbia Law School - Earth Institute
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*Karl P. Sauvant, PhD*


*Resident Senior Fellow*
*Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment*
Columbia Law School - The Earth Institute, Columbia University
435 West 116th St., Rm. JGH 825, New York, NY 10027
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"A G20 Facility to Rekindle FDI Flows", "Enabling the Full Participation of
Developing Countries in Negotiating a WTO Investment Facilitation
Framework", "Concrete Measures for a Framework on Investment Facilitation
for Development", "Making FDI more Sustainable", "Facilitating Sustainable
FDI by...", "An International Framework to Discipline Outward FDI
Incentives?", "The Case for an Advisory Centre on International Investment
Law", "An Advisory Centre on International Investment Law: Key Features",
 "Incentivizing Sustainable FDI: The Authorized Sustainable Investor", "The
Potential Value-added of a Multilateral Framework on Investment
Facilitation for Development",  "International Investment Facilitation: By
Whom and for What?", "Towards an Investment Facilitation Framework: Why?
What? When?" are available at https://ssrn.com/author=2461782 .

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