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哥伦比亚大学国际直接投资展望中文版都可以在我们的网站查看:
https://ccsi.columbia.edu/content/columbia-fdi-perspectives
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*Columbia FDI Perspectives*
Perspectives on topical foreign direct investment issues
Editor-in-Chief: Karl P. Sauvant ([log in to unmask])
Managing Editor: Matthew Conte ([log in to unmask])

*The Columbia FDI Perspectives are a forum for public debate. The views
expressed by the authors do not reflect the opinions of CCSI or our
partners and supporters.*

No. 353   March 20, 2023
*An opportunity to reimagine investment arbitration in Beijing*
<https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=6219271993&e=dd153d6a25>
by
Mark Feldman*

In recent years, some arbitration institutions in China have expanded their
services to include international investment arbitration. Such expansion
has been achieved by developing rules and arbitrator rosters focused
specifically on investment arbitration, as well as through conclusion of
cooperation agreements with relevant institutions, including the
International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). In this
area, institutions based in Shenzhen (Shenzhen Court of International
Arbitration) and Beijing (China International Economic and Trade
Arbitration Commission, Beijing Arbitration Commission) are noteworthy.

Two additional Beijing-based institutions—established, respectively, in
2015 and 2020—could further advance investment arbitration in China. The
first—the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)—has an opportunity,
as the world’s second-largest multilateral development bank by membership,
to play an important role in international investment dispute resolution,
similar to the role that has been played by the world’s largest
multilateral development bank, the World Bank, through its development of
the ICSID Convention and establishment of ICSID. The second—the
International Commercial Dispute Prevention and Settlement Organization
(ICDPASO), according to its Charter
<https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=ed5c150d00&e=dd153d6a25>,
“an international non-governmental and non-profit organization” (Art.
2)—includes international investment dispute resolution within the
integrated dispute prevention and resolution services it will provide.

Since 2018, the AIIB has published an *AIIB Yearbook of International Law*.
The 2019 *Yearbook* examined “the role of international organizations in
promoting effective dispute resolution,” including whether the AIIB was
“well placed” to serve as a “modern ICSID” for investment relating to China’s
Belt and Road Initiative
<https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=85861742bd&e=dd153d6a25>
.1 More than 55 years after the conclusion of the ICSID Convention, there
is indeed an opportunity for a Beijing-based multilateral development bank
with global membership to reimagine how a major bank of this kind might
support international investment dispute resolution. In particular, the
AIIB should consider developing one or more instruments that:

   - are more ambitious in scope than the ICSID Convention by addressing
   not only investment dispute resolution, but also substantive investment law
   standards, including, in particular, the standard of sustainability;
   - accord particular weight to dispute prevention (e.g., by establishing
   one or more offices to facilitate communications between investors and
   governments, such as the Office of the Foreign Investment Ombudsman
   <https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=5b83f45bb0&e=dd153d6a25>
   in the Republic of Korea);
   - accord particular weight to mediation (e.g., by providing detailed
   procedural guidance, as illustrated by the “Mediation Mechanism” attached
   as Annex 6
   <https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=7800456198&e=dd153d6a25>
   to the EU-Singapore Investment Protection Agreement);
   - address investment facilitation (not unlike, e.g., the Regional
   Comprehensive Economic Partnership
   <https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=1ab5cd35a3&e=dd153d6a25>,
   which includes a detailed provision on investment facilitation (Art.
   10.17)); and
   - encourage regional diversity—in particular with respect to
   representation of Asia—when developing and updating rosters (whether for
   arbitrators, conciliators or mediators).

Regarding ICDPASO, in 2021 the organization finished drafting a set of
Investor-State Arbitration Rules
<https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=e0ed0848df&e=dd153d6a25>
and committed to launching investor-state arbitration services “in a timely
manner in response to the needs of the international business community.”2 An
ICDPASO framework for dispute prevention and resolution ultimately could
place greater emphasis on alternatives to arbitration (through dispute
prevention and mediation services) and offer greater institutionalization
(through, potentially, appellate scrutiny of awards). Investment
arbitration within such a framework would be innovative. Success on these
fronts—dispute prevention, mediation, arbitration, appellate review—would
require recruitment of world-class talent.

Regarding such recruitment, ICDPASO has launched a global recruitment
process for arbitrators
<https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=73f85c20c8&e=dd153d6a25>.
Through that process, ICDPASO can further develop a distinctive framework
for resolving international investment disputes by developing a panel of
arbitrators that reflects genuine regional diversity, with strong
representation from Asia. ICDPASO ultimately could develop an innovative
model for international investment dispute resolution by combining greater
integration of services (including dispute prevention, mediation,
arbitration), greater institutionalization (with some form of appellate
review) and greater regional diversity (especially greater representation
from Asia).

The AIIB and ICDPASO ultimately could contribute to the development of a
Beijing-based international investment dispute resolution hub along
complementary, but not identical, paths. For the AIIB, any work in this
area should closely consider the link between international investment and
advancing infrastructure connectivity in Asia (the AIIB’s core mission),
just as linkages between international investment and economic development
informed the ICSID Convention’s design. In particular, the AIIB’s
infrastructure connectivity mission could inform policy choices concerning
the scope of covered “investors” and “investments.”

ICDPASO—which, at its core, is a dispute prevention and resolution
organization—could focus instead on procedural innovations, in particular
developing a novel investment dispute resolution framework that could offer
an unprecedented combination of service integration, institutionalization
and regional diversity.

------------------------------
* Mark Feldman ([log in to unmask]) is Professor of Law at Peking
University School of Transnational Law. The author wishes to thank Julien
Chaisse, Wenhua Shan and an anonymous peer reviewer for their helpful peer
reviews.
1 pp. 1-3, chapter by Malik Dahlan, who argued that the AIIB could serve as
a “modern ICSID” for Belt and Road disputes.
2 Speech by Liu Chao, Secretary-General of the ICDPASO, at the World Law
Congress Colombia 2021 (Dec. 3, 2021).
*The material in this Perspective may be reprinted if accompanied by the
following acknowledgment: “Mark Feldman**, ‘**An opportunity to reimagine
investment arbitration in Beijing**,**’ Columbia FDI Perspectives, No. 353,
March 20, 2023. Reprinted with permission from the Columbia Center on
Sustainable **Investment (**http://ccsi.columbia.edu*
<https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=74a98aab3a&e=dd153d6a25>*).”
A copy should kindly be sent to the Columbia Center on Sustainable
Investment at **[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>

For further information, including information regarding submission to the
*Perspectives*, please contact: Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment,
Matthew Conte, [log in to unmask]

*Most recent Columbia FDI Perspectives*
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   - No. 352, Nicola Woodroffe and and Erica Westenberg, “Governments and
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   <https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=dadb44dfcc&e=dd153d6a25>,”
   *Columbia FDI Perspectives*, March 6, 2023
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   <https://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=cec3875f59&e=dd153d6a25>
   *,*” *Columbia FDI Perspectives*, February 6, 2023

*All previous FDI Perspectives are available at
https://ccsi.columbia.edu/content/columbia-fdi-perspectives
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*Other relevant CCSI news and announcements*

   - CCSI and the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law are hiring for the
   position of *Senior Researcher or Senior Associate, Climate Law &
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   applicants with a JD (or equivalent legal degree) or PhD degree as well as
   applicants with other degrees. **More details on the position and
   instructions for applying can be found here
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   - *Apply now* for our 2023 virtual *Executive Training Program on
   Extractive Industries and Sustainable Development* from* June 5–16, 2023*.
   The interdisciplinary program is designed to equip participants with the
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   dialogue about best practices from around the globe. Applications will be
   considered on a rolling basis until March 31, 2023. *For more
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   - *Apply now* for our 2023 virtual *Executive Training Program on
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   dedicated to engagement with course lecturers and participants from around
   the world. Applications will be considered on a rolling basis until April
   7, 2023. *For more information, and to apply, visit our website
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   .

Karl P. Sauvant, Ph.D.
Senior Fellow
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
Columbia Law School - Columbia Climate School
*Copyright © 2023 Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI), All
rights reserved.*
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*Karl P. Sauvant, PhD*


*Senior Fellow*
*Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment*
Columbia Law School, Columbia University
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