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6 - The Politics of the European Union's Investment Treaty Making

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2011

Tomer Broude
Affiliation:
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Marc L. Busch
Affiliation:
Georgetown University, Washington DC
Amelia Porges
Affiliation:
Law office of Amelia Porges
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The 2006 European Union (EU) Commission Communication, “Global Europe, Competing in the World,” focuses on securing the EU's place in multipolar international economic relations. The Treaty of Lisbon is one of the instruments through which the EU is seeking to enhance its role as a major player in the global economy, particularly in the area of investment policy. In this area, the legal competences of the European Community (EC) before the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon were very limited, in contrast to the largely exclusive EC competences in trade policy. The Lisbon “project” of consolidating the competence of bilateral investment treaty (BIT) making at the European level presents an interesting junction between economic law and politics, at both the international and European levels.

This chapter seeks to explain the interaction of law and politics of BIT making in the EU. Part 2 outlines the functions of investment protection law as an important economic factor in the competition of legal orders, after the failure of multilateralization in the area of investment. Before this background, it shows the weakness of the current European system of investment protection in comparison to the standard achieved by the United States in its approach to investment protection. A coherent external EU investment policy does not exist at the time of this writing. Rather, foreign investment policy and protection are divided between the EU and its member states.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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