Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-dtkg6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-17T10:25:35.441Z Has data issue: true hasContentIssue false

The many faces of sovereignty

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 September 2024

Kate Yoon*
Affiliation:
Yale Law School, 127 Wall Street, New Haven CT 06511, USA
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Critiques of international economic law have attacked the tendency of transnational legal processes, including investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS), to undermine states' sovereignty. In response to these criticisms, many states have limited the power of investment tribunals by reasserting their sovereignty. There are reasons, however, to be critical of endorsing sovereignty, particularly in the context of global distributive inequalities. This is because assertions of sovereignty are normatively ambivalent in their effects: they can be used to entrench and naturalize the unequal assets held by each state, rather than to empower states to exercise their right to regulate. These potential tensions can be resolved if sovereignty is understood as a term that is used in many different ways. Critics of ISDS often conflate two distinct meanings of sovereignty: sovereignty understood as the right to be free from external influence, and sovereignty understood as states' right to regulate. Because states are constrained by differences in resources and capacity, withdrawing from ISDS cannot always secure the conditions for effective domestic regulation. Sovereignty understood as the right to be free from interference may even stand in the way of states' ability to regulate, by allowing states to gatekeep resources that were accumulated through historical injustice

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

Critiques of international economic law have attacked the tendency of transnational legal processes to undermine states' sovereignty. As the argument goes, tribunals ruling on trade law and investment law have been empowered to challenge and constrain domestic laws concerning health, environmental protection and distributive justice. Investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) has been a frequent target of such criticisms, in response to which many states have limited the power of investment tribunals by reasserting sovereignty.

There are reasons, however, to be sceptical of assertions of sovereignty. In light of global distributive inequalities, it becomes evident that assertions of sovereignty are normatively ambivalent in their effects. Appeals to sovereignty can be used to entrench and naturalize inequalities between states, rather than to empower weak states to exercise their right to regulate.

These potential tensions can be resolved if sovereignty is understood as a term with many possible meanings, where the various meanings are not only different from, but also potentially in tension with, one another. Critics of ISDS often conflate two distinct meanings of sovereignty: sovereignty understood as the right to be free from external influence, and sovereignty understood as states' right to regulate. Because states are constrained by differences in resources and capacity, withdrawing from ISDS cannot always secure the conditions for effective domestic regulation. Sovereignty understood as the right to be free from interference may even stand in the way of states' ability to regulate, by allowing states to gatekeep resources that were accumulated through historical injustice. In making this point, this paper draws on the spirit of the 1970s demand for a New International Economic Order (NIEO). The NIEO recognized that global distributive inequalities stood in the way of states' effective exercise of their regulatory powers. It attempted to rectify those inequalities through an international redistributive project. That project, in turn, required states – particularly wealthy ones – to partially limit their external sovereignty in order to create the material conditions under which all states could exercise their powers to regulate in a meaningful and equitable way.

I proceed in four stages. First, I describe the perceived encroachment of international economic law on states' sovereignty and the backlash that it has generated, focusing on investor-state dispute resolution (ISDS). ISDS is a system in which arbitral tribunals resolve disputes between foreign investors and host states, arising from investment treaties between the home country of the investor and the host state. In recent years, ISDS has attracted criticism for its tendency to restrict states' sovereignty, to which some states have responded by limiting the scope of investor-state arbitration or withdrawing from it altogether.

Second, I place the backlash against ISDS in the context of a broader tradition of critiquing the idea of sovereignty. Scholars in this vein have argued against idealizing sovereignty, especially on the grounds that it entrenches inequality between individuals and states. While such criticisms seem to be at odds with the pro-sovereignty backlash against ISDS, I argue that the two positions can be made compatible with one another. That is because both views agree on the normative value of sovereignty insofar as it is understood as the right to regulate – which is what is really at stake in debates about ISDS.

I next develop this analysis by disaggregating the concept of sovereignty into its different possible meanings. ISDS appears to constrain sovereignty as understood in two different ways: it constrains the right to be free from external interference and the right to regulate within a state's borders. Importantly, those two rights are not co-extensive. This is a reality to which, I argue, critics of ISDS have been insufficiently attentive. I make this argument by drawing on the example of South Africa's response to ISDS. In South Africa, economic reforms for restorative justice after apartheid were challenged through ISDS, which led the South African government to decide to not renew its bilateral investment treaties (BITs). However, freedom from interference from international tribunals is not enough to achieve the restorative justice that South Africa aspires to. Instead, restorative justice demands transnational justice and redistribution, which in turn may require wealthier states to relinquish their right to be free from interference.

Finally, I consider the kinds of redistributive interventions that would change the conditions under which states exercise their sovereignty. I draw on the example of the 1970s demand for an NIEO, which is illustrative not only in how states sought to transform the conditions for the exercise of sovereignty, but also in how they leveraged the formal equality of sovereignty that was available to them to demand that transformation. This discussion suggests that, even as the different meanings of sovereignty have been used to subordinate Global South nations, the ambiguity in and multidimensional nature of sovereignty can also be wielded as a tool to provide a path for reform. This means that while securing sovereignty as the right to exclude is not sufficient to securing the ability to regulate, it can be used in conditional support of the ability to regulate.

International economic law: the view from sovereignty

The dominant framing in current critiques of international economic law is that it undermines states' authority to enact democratically authorized laws and regulations in the public interest. I focus on controversies and developments in international investment law to illustrate the logic of this critique and the sovereigntist response that it has sparked. This discussion will serve as the basis for a critical evaluation of sovereignty, and its role in reforming international economic law.

The perceived problem

BITs are typically concluded between countries with the purpose of encouraging foreign direct investment by granting protections to investors in the host state – protections such as national treatment and most-favoured-nation treatment, fair and equitable treatment, protections against expropriation and the right to transfer funds freely into and out of the country.Footnote 1 They came into use in the latter half of the twentieth century and proliferated rapidly in the 1990s.Footnote 2 BITs were concluded against the backdrop of Global South countries' need for foreign investment, and were seen as a way of improving investor confidence.Footnote 3

One controversial element of BITs is their provisions regarding ISDS (also referred to as investor-state dispute resolution), which allow investors to bring disputes to arbitral tribunals concerning alleged violations of their rights under the BIT. One paradigmatic category of alleged violations is expropriation, for which foreign investors are entitled to compensation.Footnote 4 While international law has long recognized the rule that foreigners must be compensated for the expropriation of their property, in recent decades tribunals have awarded compensation for an increasingly wide range of allegedly expropriatory acts.Footnote 5 Tribunals grant compensation to investors for ‘indirect expropriation’ – situations ‘in which an investor's legal title is not extinguished but the actions of a state are, in legally significant respects, analogous to direct expropriation’.Footnote 6 In such cases, the alleged indirect expropriation may be the result of domestic laws and regulations, such as those concerning health or environmental protection. In one widely publicized case, the tobacco company Philip Morris brought a case against Uruguay before the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), alleging that its anti-smoking legislation was expropriatory.Footnote 7 Other cases that have received scholarly and public attention include Eli Lilly v. Canada, in which a pharmaceutical company argued that Canadian courts' interpretation of Canadian intellectual property laws violated NAFTA;Footnote 8 and TransCanada v. USA, in which an oil company argued that the U.S. government's denial of a permit to construct the Keystone XL Pipeline violated NAFTA.Footnote 9

For reasons of space, I will not be able to survey the vast literature concerning the legal standards that tribunals use to distinguish between legitimate regulations and indirect expropriations. Tribunals often look to the effects of the measure in question, such as whether the measure has the effect of substantially depriving the investor of its expected economic benefits, or of its property interests in the investment.Footnote 10 Alternatively, tribunals will sometimes consider the legitimacy of the host state's purpose in enacting the measure,Footnote 11 including whether the state was validly exercising its police powers in enacting it.Footnote 12

Not all governmental measures that negatively impact investors are struck down. In fact, many of the highly publicized cases were not ultimately decided in favour of the investor, as tribunals often recognize states' rights to enact domestic laws and regulations even if it affects foreign-owned property. Estimates suggest that investors win in about a third of investor-state arbitration cases.Footnote 13 In the Philip Morris case, the tribunal held that Uruguay's anti-tobacco laws did not substantially deprive Philip Morris of its investment, then went further to hold that Uruguay validly exercised its police powers in enacting the laws.Footnote 14 Still, critics have found troubling the very fact that international tribunals could rule on domestic laws and regulations, entailing prolonged litigation and often resulting in expensive settlements or awards.Footnote 15 Critics have found problematic the procedural aspects of ISDS, which prioritize the judgement of privately appointed arbitrators shrouded under secrecy over the decision of democratically elected executives and legislatures. They have also criticized the outcomes that these tribunals tend to produce, which can challenge measures that are aimed at protecting the environment, promoting health and safety, and achieving distributive justice.Footnote 16

The response

These critiques have given way to a reform movement in ISDS. Although different countries have opted for different measures, the overarching characteristic of this reform movement is that it makes room for states to exercise their sovereignty.Footnote 17 My focus in this section is on states' unilateral responses to the ISDS regime, rather than multilateral negotiations, although the backlash to ISDS has also triggered multilateral negotiations such as those under the auspices of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Working Group III (WG III).Footnote 18

States have changed the rules of arbitrations by negotiating BITs with different terms that limit investors' rights, and correspondingly make more space for domestic regulation.Footnote 19 One example of this is India's new Model BIT, which rules out compensation for non-discriminatory regulatory measures.Footnote 20 The new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), a successor to NAFTA, also significantly constrains the right of investors to bring claims against state parties.Footnote 21 NAFTA is a notable example of the turn towards sovereignty because it is both the site in which the earliest criticisms of ISDS emerged, and one in which states already had relatively greater power to shape the rules of arbitrations. Early on, contracting states established the ability to issue authoritative interpretations of NAFTA's investor-protection provisions.Footnote 22 In recent years, more BITs have explicitly provided for state participation in investor-state arbitration using mechanisms such as those contained in NAFTA.Footnote 23

Other states have established altogether new institutions, such as domestic ‘international’ courts – courts that are technically domestic courts, but apply foreign law to transnational disputes.Footnote 24 Relatedly, they have pushed for the increased role of the state in disputes through the alternative of state-to-state (rather than investor-state) disputes.Footnote 25 Finally, some states have withdrawn from ISDS altogether, such as by withdrawing from the ICSID Convention.Footnote 26 In South Africa, about which more will be said below, the government decided to withdraw from some BITs, not renew any of its existing commitments, and to apply domestic law to investment disputes.Footnote 27

These measures increase the role of the state, by formally recognizing the state's right to regulate over investors' rights, and allowing the state to actively intervene in dispute resolution procedures when its regulatory interests are perceived to be at stake. The assumption underlying the ISDS reform movement is that withdrawing from investor protection measures will strengthen states' right to regulate – the right to pass laws that benefit the general interest, including laws concerning health, safety, environmental protection and distributive justice.

Sovereignty and its discontents

While states' backlash to ISDS has largely stemmed from a negative reaction to perceived encroachments on their sovereignty, the scholarship on sovereignty – and especially postcolonial critiques of sovereignty – gives us reasons to be sceptical of elevating sovereignty as an ideal. Many of those who express criticisms of the ideal of sovereignty also write from the perspective of the Global South and its citizens, in whose name critics of ISDS also often speak. In contrast to the critics of ISDS who seek to reassert sovereignty, these critics of sovereignty suggest that sovereignty is a hollow ideal that even justifies domination, either of individuals by states, or of states by other more powerful states. These claims raise a serious challenge that must be taken seriously; however, as I ultimately argue, they lead to a conditional defence of a certain conception of sovereignty that privileges states' domestic right to regulate.

Sovereignty in a globalized world

Those who argue for asserting sovereignty in the face of potential encroachments by ISDS are motivated, as I have suggested in the first section above, by the belief that states should be able to regulate markets through domestic laws and regulations, taking into account a wide range of substantive values. However, this belief may be founded on an unrealistic idea of how states function. As theorists of sovereignty have long pointed out, there was no ‘golden age of the Westphalian state’; it was never the case that states were autonomous, independent and impenetrable.Footnote 28

It may seem like an especially hopeless task to realize that Westphalian model in a world that has already been shaped by globalization.Footnote 29 In fact, in today's world, the most serious challenges that arise are likely to be transnational in character, such as addressing climate change, responding to public health crises such as pandemics or managing transnational flows of people and capital. Such challenges demand responses that are also transnational in character, and therefore it may seem that state sovereignty is not the best means of promoting the underlying values of the regulation at stake.

Still, it appears that the sovereignty of the nation-state remains one of the few currently available of protecting values such as democracy, human and environmental health, and distributive justice. Most concretely, domestic democratic processes tend to be mobilized more easily than existing international institutions, which often do not have formal mechanisms of input and accountability. Existing international institutions have been criticized for their tendency to empower a small number of elites, who in turn tend to promote and entrench market values.Footnote 30 For these reasons, Martti Koskenniemi has argued that the assertion of sovereignty represents the ‘expression of local values and preferences as well as traditions of self-rule, autonomy, and continuous political contestation’.Footnote 31 In other words, what is really at stake in protecting sovereignty is protecting self-determination: the powers of political communities to democratically determine their ends. This is both a procedural and substantive argument: sovereignty is valuable because it promotes the procedure of democracy and the substance of the aims that are democratically determined.

As Koskenniemi's focus on ‘local values and preferences’ alludes to, there are reasons to believe that even as a matter of principle, a world of many sovereign states would be preferable to, for example, one global institution in the form of a ‘world state’. This is because of the possibility that institutions that are closer to the people to whom they are accountable would be better able to reflect their demands and preferences. Singular, overarching global institutions risk being unaccountable and even becoming despotic.Footnote 32

In some circumstances, it may appear that local, democratic self-determination comes at the expense of addressing challenges that are global in scope, such as climate change or global pandemics. The procedure of domestic democracy may not align with the substance of (possibly global) values such as human rights, health justice or environmental justice. In response, it is worth noting that the record of some international institutions has been spotty, tending to favour the functioning of the market over other values.Footnote 33 More importantly, however, this defence of sovereignty does not rule out the possibility of certain international agreements to coordinate global efforts. It merely strongly conditions those agreements on democratic consent and ongoing democratic authorization. In the ideal scenario, it is even possible that domestic and international institutions could serve a mutually reinforcing function, as states could experiment with different laws that are suited to local contexts, while international institutions could hold states accountable and coordinate efforts.

In what follows, I investigate two further objections to the principle of sovereignty. On the individual level, there is a concern that empowering states will not necessarily benefit the individuals that live within those states, but instead create arbitrary differences between individuals because of the state in which they happen to be born. Second, on the state level, there is a concern that protecting sovereignty might entrench inequalities and arbitrary differences between states. I address both of these concerns in turn, and suggest that both actually lead to a limited and conditional defence of sovereignty, insofar as it is understood as the right of states to regulate within their borders.

The cosmopolitan critique

State sovereignty may not be a good means of promoting substantive values through regulation because each state is both differently motivated and differently positioned in its capacity to regulate. Insofar as individual people are the beneficiaries of such regulation, such critics might worry that the right to enjoy clean, unpolluted air or water or safety regulations at work might be dictated by the state they happen to be born in.

One version of this claim may be rooted in the worry that, because of different countries' internal political organization, some states would be more democratically responsive than others. In light of such institutional differences, allowing states to assert their sovereignty might not correlate with regulation that benefits the relevant people in question. It might even empower the wrong people, such as local elites and even autocrats, who are especially poorly placed to enact domestic regulations that would be in the best interests of the people they claim to represent.Footnote 34

This concern is valid in the abstract, but once it is applied to real, existing regimes, its troubling implications emerge. Charges of authoritarianism and autocracy are often levied against Global South, postcolonial nations, to blame states for their deficiencies when they face severe constraints in resources and state capacity. In the worst case, such charges have been rhetorical tools used to disempower postcolonial nations, and even to justify intervention.Footnote 35 It is no coincidence that historically, scepticism about states' ability to guarantee the protection of individuals' rights emerged in a moment of backlash against the most radical claims made by postcolonial nations for intrastate redistribution.Footnote 36 On this view, the even-more utopian demand of cosmopolitanism, which dismisses all state boundaries as morally irrelevant, may even serve as a means of watering down what can actually be achieved in practice.Footnote 37

It is possible, however, to develop a more nuanced version of this claim that focuses on states' differing capacities to regulate and interrogates the sources of those differences. Different states have different capacities to regulate in part because of the legacies of imperial extraction. European colonists not only extracted resources from their colonies, but also weakened the political institutions of their colonies to facilitate extraction.Footnote 38 After decolonization, as Vanessa Ogle has written, former colonists swiftly relocated their capital from former colonies to offshore tax havens, depriving newly independent nations of tax revenue.Footnote 39 Furthermore, she suggests that when the Europeans left their former colonies, they entrusted power to elites closest to them, contributing to the massive inequality that is pervasive in such countries today.Footnote 40 Such events may explain why it is in the formerly colonized countries that people enjoy lower standards of material and civil well-being.Footnote 41

Understood in this way, this critique of sovereignty can even turn into an argument for strengthening a certain kind of sovereignty – the dimension of sovereignty associated with the right to regulate. Sovereignty in its domestic, regulatory dimension offers individuals benefits, including opportunities for democratic expression and the benefits of effective regulation. Insofar as the sovereign state is the channel that most effectively ensures individuals' access to these benefits, differences in state capacity are troubling for cosmopolitans because they also translate to differences in individual entitlements. While equalizing state capacity may not be sufficient for equalizing individual entitlements, it is at least a necessary minimum condition. This line of reasoning leads not to the conclusion that the principle of sovereignty should be rejected, but instead that the conditions of its exercise should be made available to all.

The historical critique

Another related critique of the idea of sovereignty operates at the level of states: that sovereignty has historically been used to disempower states, particularly postcolonial states in the Global South, and to entrench existing inequalities between states. Upon closer inspection, however, it appears that many such postcolonial criticisms of sovereignty do not take issue with the assertion of sovereignty per se, but rather the privileging of certain meanings of sovereignty over others – for example, the privileging of states' formal equality and their ability to enter into binding agreements, over their right to regulate within their territory. In this way, these criticisms further support a conditional defence of sovereignty that privileges its domestic, regulatory aspect.

Critics have argued that the principle of sovereignty is tainted by its origins in perpetuating Eurocentrism and imperialism. For example, Antony Anghie has argued that the idea of sovereignty emerged ‘out of the attempt to create a legal system that could account for relations between the European and non-European worlds’ in the colonial encounter. Non-Europeans were bound by the supposedly universal system of natural law, but they were not recognized as fully sovereign; they were only included as subjects to be disciplined through the law.Footnote 42 After decolonization, former colonies were granted formal sovereignty but without the abilities and privileges that had traditionally been associated with sovereignty.Footnote 43 What these critics suggest is that as a result of this history, the idea of sovereignty works to the detriment of non-Western nations.Footnote 44

One example of how the idea of sovereignty has been used to the detriment of Global South states is the doctrine of state succession. According to the doctrine of state succession, newly independent states must carry out their obligations to other states despite ruptures in domestic authority, such as independence from colonization. This means that they are obligated to repay debts or to continue concessions for the exploitation of natural resources.Footnote 45 Another example is the practice of conditional lending, in which states – often poorer states in the Global South – are presumed to have agreed to often punitive structural adjustment regimes when they agreed to borrow money. In such cases, the idea that a state is ‘sovereign’ is used to undermine its ‘sovereignty’. Meanwhile, Global North nations, many of which have benefited from imperialism and ongoing relations of unequal dependence, use the idea of sovereignty to assert its exclusive entitlements to the wealth that they accumulated.Footnote 46

These claims can be rephrased not as criticisms of sovereignty per se, but criticisms of the way in which certain possible meanings of sovereignty are elevated above others. For example, in the case of state succession or conditional lending, a state's ability to enter into binding commitments, formally as equals with other states, is privileged over its ability to regulate its economy. In the case of states asserting exclusive possession of wealth that is the product of transnational processes, some (wealthy, powerful) states' ability to exclude external interference is privileged over other (less wealthy, weaker) states' ability to provide material well-being for their citizens.

This selective interpretation of the meaning of sovereignty weakens states' ability to effectively control their domestic affairs and to be able to provide for their citizens. Practices of conditional lending and structural adjustment, for example, have imposed market-liberalizing reforms that have increased poverty and inequality, and have made it harder for states to set their own economic policy.Footnote 47 What these criticisms demand, then, is similar to what cosmopolitan criticisms of sovereignty demand: a focus on sovereignty specifically understood as the right to regulate domestically. In that sense, these criticisms might be reconcilable with ISDS critics' attempts to reassert sovereignty.

Dimensions of sovereignty

As the preceding discussion suggests, sovereignty has a variety of possible meanings, some of which are in tension with one another. This allows us to reconcile the views of, on the one hand, the defenders of sovereignty against ISDS, and on the other, the critics of sovereignty. Both seem to agree on the importance of bolstering states' regulatory powers. Returning to the implications for ISDS reform, recognition of the different possible meanings of sovereignty also allows us to formulate a more precise conception of sovereignty that can be mobilized in defending states' rights to regulate. Importantly, this conception of sovereignty must distinguish between the right to exclude external interference and the right to regulate, while recognizing when advancing one does not necessarily advance the other.

The faces of sovereignty

Stephen D. Krasner offers a typology of the different meanings of sovereignty, which I draw on and develop in this section. Using this typology of sovereignty, we can see that ISDS (as it currently exists) stands in tension with sovereignty as it is understood in some ways, but not in others. As Krasner has argued, sovereignty is a term that is used in at least four different senses.

International legal sovereignty refers to the practices associated with mutual recognition, usually between territorial entities that have formal juridical independence. Westphalian sovereignty refers to political organization based on the exclusion of external actors from authority structures within a given territory. Domestic sovereignty refers to the formal organization of political authority within the state and the ability of public authorities to exercise effective control within the borders of their own polity. Finally, interdependence sovereignty refers to the ability of public authorities to regulate the flow of information, ideas, goods, people, pollutants, or capital across the borders of their state.Footnote 48

For my purposes, I will simplify the typology to collapse interdependence sovereignty and domestic sovereignty. This is first for the sake of simplicity, as my aim is to highlight the potential tension between three aspects of sovereignty: the ability to enter into commitments in relation to other states (international legal sovereignty), the ability to exclude external actors from interfering with the internal matters of the state (Westphalian sovereignty) and the ability to exercise effective control over domestic policy and regulation (domestic sovereignty). This simplification is further justified by the fact that domestic sovereignty requires at least a certain degree of interdependence sovereignty.

While Krasner suggests that it is possible for a state to retain domestic authority even when it lacks control over transnational flows, this distinction does not seem to hold up in practice.Footnote 49 It is telling that many of the examples that Krasner uses of domestic control necessarily involve control over transnational flows: states may or may not ‘be able to maintain order, collect taxes, regulate pornography, repress drug use, prevent abortion, minimize corruption, or control crime’.Footnote 50 A state's ability to enact policy can be severely curtailed if it does not have control over transnational flows of goods, people and capital. In this way, (at least some degree of) interdependence sovereignty becomes a necessary condition for domestic sovereignty.

Applying Krasner's disaggregation of the many possible meanings of sovereignty, in what ways does the current ISDS regime restrict sovereignty? The ISDS regime does not restrict sovereignty in one important respect: it is premised on the recognition of states' international legal sovereignty, insofar as it is a product of treaties that are entered into between states that mutually recognize one another's authority. The core of international legal sovereignty, after all, is that states are equal and can enter into binding agreements with other states.Footnote 51

However, ISDS entails potential restrictions on both Westphalian and domestic sovereignty. ISDS potentially restricts Westphalian sovereignty because it allows for the influence of external actors – investors and tribunals – to direct the actions of the government, for example, by requiring the government to compensate investors for expropriation. It potentially restricts the hallmark of Westphalian sovereignty, that ‘within [a given] territory, domestic political authorities are the only arbiters of legitimate behavior’.Footnote 52 ISDS also potentially violates domestic sovereignty because such influences affect the range of action available to governments. For example, they may decide not to pass certain laws because of the possibility that investors could bring suits. If investors do bring suits against states and win, states' fiscal capacities may be affected by the need to compensate investors.

This disaggregation helps us to identify with precision what exactly is at stake in critiques of ISDS. The backlash against ISDS has largely focused on restoring the right of states to exclude external influence, but in the name of strengthening states' ability to enact domestic regulations. This conflation between the two different meanings of sovereignty is potentially problematic because they are not necessarily aligned with one another. Asserting the right to exclude (what I have called, following Krasner, Westphalian sovereignty) is neither sufficient to promote the right to regulate, and may sometimes need to be violated to promote the right to regulate. I will make this point by first making clear the distinction between the two dimensions of sovereignty in theoretical terms, then applying it to the concrete case of South Africa's rejection of ISDS.

Between the right to exclude and the power to regulate

The right to exclude external interference and the right to regulate are not coextensive with one another. This is because the absence of interference from outside does not necessarily entail that a state has control and authority over domestic affairs. Among other reasons, this disjuncture arises because of differences in capacity – differences in the robustness and stability of political institutions or revenue base. Consider, for example, the policy imperative of transitioning from a fossil fuel-based economy to a renewables-based economy in the face of climate change. Even in the absence of external interference (such as through challenges brought by investors in the fossil fuel sector under ISDS), such transitions could be more difficult when a state is not able to subsidize the transition and invest in updated infrastructure.

One possible objection to this framing is that I have assumed that the right to regulate demands more than it actually does. As this objection goes, states are entitled to the right to regulate, but not to an equal right or power to regulate vis-à-vis other states. Therefore, the right to exclude external interference is largely sufficient to secure the right to regulate within a state's borders. Several responses are possible to this objection: the first, most theoretical response, is that a right is meaningless absent the absolute basic conditions of its exercise. In other words, even if states are not entitled to an equal starting point, they are entitled to a baseline. There is reason to think, based on the evidence about the effect of imperialism and its legacies discussed above, that many states have in fact been deprived of this baseline.

In addition, I have raised some reasons why states should be entitled to a relatively equal starting point. Even if differences in the ability to regulate were entirely the product of chance, those differences should be neutralized because they affect the individuals who live within different states: whether individuals live in a state that effectively enacts regulatory measures for their own benefit should not depend on where they happen to be born. But additionally, differences in the ability to regulate are not the product of pure chance; they are instead, at least in part, the product of particular histories of injustice. Such histories may further create a special obligation on the part of beneficiaries of such injustice to rectify the differences that have arisen from them, as between either individuals or states.Footnote 53

This point leads to another point of disjuncture between domestic and Westphalian sovereignty. Selective restrictions of Westphalian sovereignty may even be compatible with, and support, states' right to regulate within their borders. Consider the case of an international agreement that requires wealthier countries to financially support poorer countries' transition to renewable energy by investing in a common fund. Such an agreement would potentially limit the Westphalian sovereignty of the wealthier nations by requiring them to take an action that they would not have otherwise taken. However, it could also strengthen the domestic sovereignty of the beneficiaries. As I will illustrate through the example of South Africa below, there are cases in which such violations of Westphalian sovereignty may be necessary to equalize the capacity of states to regulate.

In highlighting the limits of a conception of sovereignty that highlights its ‘negative’ features – that is, sovereignty as the right to exclude – I draw on scholarship that has conceptualized freedom as more than negative freedom, or the right to be free from interference. Conceptualizing sovereignty as merely the right to be free from external interference fails to recognize the ways in which states are already embedded in, and even constrained by, existing relations of interconnectedness and dependence – such as the relations created by imperialism and its legacies.Footnote 54 Removing external interference merely returns states to the status quo ex ante, a baseline in which their capacity to meaningfully act is already limited by those existing relations. The inequities of, and the exigencies created by, the status quo ex ante were precisely the reason why many states turned to measures such as BITs to attract foreign investment.

South Africa's sovereigntist turn

The case of South Africa's withdrawal from ISDS serves to illustrate the distinction, and potential tension, between domestic and Westphalian sovereignty. The South African government withdrew from ISDS in part to carry out the mandate of redressing the historical wrong of racial subordination in the apartheid regime. However, while withdrawing from ISDS removed a source of potential interference with domestic policy, it could not fully redress the historical wrong of racial subordination. This is in part because the wealth that was the product of South Africa's history of racial subordination has already been siphoned off to other countries, where it is protected by the sovereignty of those countries.

South Africa's withdrawal from ISDS is important to understand because it not only illustrates the so-called backlash to ISDS, but also because it shows that the stakes of sovereignty are not equal for everyone. As Morosini and Badin have put it, South Africa's withdrawal from ISDS illustrates that whereas Global North countries are concerned about their right to limit negative externalities by making exceptions for market-based logic in the areas of health, safety and environment, Global South countries are often concerned about ‘their ability to achieve fundamental constitutional mandates, such as the South African civil rights attempt to redress past legacies of apartheid rule’.Footnote 55

Foresti v. The Republic of South Africa was a case that prompted reconsideration of the bilateral investment regime in South Africa. In this case, the claimants argued that their investments in mines had been directly expropriated as a result of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act of 2002. This law had extinguished the previous system of mineral rights and introduced a new one, in which the state required investors to increase the percentage of historically disadvantaged South Africans in ownership and management positions in mining operations.Footnote 56 As a result of Foresti, the South African government conducted an internal review of its obligations under BITs, and concluded that they stood in tension with Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) initiatives.Footnote 57

BEE is a form of domestic regulation aimed at achieving distributive justice, but it is also – at least in aspiration – more than that. It represents a constitutional mandate to rectify the distribution of property and wealth in the South African economy, monopolized as it was for decades by the white ruling class.Footnote 58 Furthermore, BEE was imagined as a way of achieving economic growth and eradicating poverty by giving greater opportunities to historically disadvantaged South Africans, another fundamental constitutional mandate of the South African government.Footnote 59 Citing the historical exclusion of non-white people from the South African economy and the detrimental effect of this exclusion on growth and development in South Africa, the government attempted to increase the percentage of historically disadvantaged groups represented in the ownership and management of private companies.Footnote 60 In practice, BEE did not live up to these aspirations: many have criticized it for selectively empowering a Black elite that is close to the African National Congress (ANC), instead of accomplishing its stated aim of redistributing to the historically disadvantaged.Footnote 61

In any case, Foresti was concluded by a settlement between the investors and the government of South Africa, in which South Africa granted the investors with new order mineral rights without requiring them to sell 26% of their shares to historically disadvantaged South Africans. The investors would ‘be deemed to have complied with the Mining Charter’ by processing and adding value to 21% of the stone that they mined in South Africa, and creating a 5% ownership programme for employees.Footnote 62

As a result of such challenges to BEE, the South African government responded by terminating some BITs that included ISDS and rolling out a new system of investment protection and regulation, under the Protection of Investment Act (2015). This law was intended to bring the regime governing foreign investment in line with the South African Constitution, and make room for South Africa's right to address ‘historical, social and economic inequalities’.Footnote 63 Among other things, this law requires investors to exhaust domestic remedies before they can submit a request for international arbitration, which in turn will take the form of state-to-state rather than investor-state arbitration.Footnote 64 It also prevents investors from seeking compensation for many forms of indirect expropriation.Footnote 65 These changes are notable because South African domestic law does not always correspond to standards of protection of property that prevail under international law: for example, as Agnes Forere notes, under South African law, if the government acquires property and passes it to a third party (such as historically disadvantaged persons), the government is said not to have committed an act of expropriation.Footnote 66

The conditions of domestic sovereignty

In South Africa, the backlash against ISDS was prompted by limitations on the exercise of sovereignty that were perceived as unjust, especially limitations on South Africa's attempts to rectify historical injustices committed during the apartheid era. Yet this example also suggests the limits of withdrawing from ISDS. Initiatives such as BEE may be protected from challenges by investors, but even such initiatives do not rectify the international inequalities that have accumulated between states, and the members of states, as a result of historical injustices such as imperialism and apartheid.Footnote 67

In South Africa, for example, the long history of imperialism and apartheid did not only lead to wide gaps between white and Black South Africans, it also led to an extraction of value from South Africa to European nations. British and Dutch colonial rule in South Africa prior to its independence created an extraction-based economy in which infrastructure and institutions were created to serve the needs of mining companies, whose profit was then redirected to financial centres in colonial metropoles.Footnote 68 Economic historians have argued that diamond mining in South Africa did not drive inclusive economic progress because political institutions were captured by elites in the mining sector and public spending was heavily concentrated on infrastructure, such as railways, that supported resource extraction.Footnote 69 Multinational corporations, including mining companies, continued to extract profits from the depressed wages of Black South Africans during apartheid.Footnote 70 After the end of apartheid, many South African corporations transferred their headquarters to London – even corporations that had benefited from state-granted monopolies.Footnote 71

The point here is not to unfairly criticize domestic laws for being powerless to address transnational and international conditions. It is instead to suggest that the absence of interference – as represented by the end of ISDS – is compatible with severe limitations on what projects Global South nations can actually carry out in practice. South Africa's BEE policies are, in an important sense, incomplete: even though they aim to redistribute wealth between those who benefited and those who were harmed by apartheid, they cannot access the wealth that was removed through the international transfer of capital from South Africa. As a result, these policies can only give opportunities to historically disadvantaged South Africans within the boundaries of the South African state and economy.

Furthermore, such restrictions on the South African government's policy aims are enabled by the Westphalian sovereignty of other states. The principle of sovereignty, at least its Westphalian dimension, can be used to gatekeep resources and opportunities within the states to which capital has been transferred. Even in an egalitarian welfare state, the tax base that enables redistribution of resources is limited to the borders of the state. Economic opportunities are available only to those who are inside the borders of the country, and restrictive immigration policies make it difficult, even for citizens of former colonies, to enter the metropole.Footnote 72

Ultimately, it is these inequalities that influence states to attract foreign investment through BITs in the first place, restricting the ability of states to decide what kind of foreign investment regime to adopt on their own terms. Even when countries like South Africa do attempt to resist encroachments on sovereignty, the competing need for investment limits the possibility of doing so. Zimbabwe quickly backtracked from its attempt to enact a more radical version of BEE when it became clear that such laws would have negative consequences for investment.Footnote 73 More recently, India has faced challenges in operationalizing its Model BIT, which required (among other things) that investors exhaust local remedies, that is, the remedies available to them in domestic courts, before seeking recourse to international tribunals.Footnote 74

A path to reform

Because states differ in their capacity to regulate, securing a meaningful right to regulate is likely to require more than limiting external influence. Instead, it is necessary to address the differences in wealth and resources between nations. In this section, I draw on the spirit of the NIEO to illustrate what such a project of reform might look like – and to illustrate that such a project may not be as far-fetched as it may initially seem.

My reconstruction of the NIEO draws special emphasis to two aspects of the project. The first is that it was an earlier attempt to reconsider the international legal system governing foreign investment, much like today's discussions about ISDS reform. However, unlike in the present moment, the architects of the NIEO recognized that the law of foreign investment was affected by centuries of imperialism and extraction. This history both gave rise to the need for foreign investment and also meant that it was not enough to simply withdraw from a regime that protected investors over states. Instead, a project of transnational redistribution was necessary. As Adom Getachew has convincingly argued, anticolonial nationalists in this period were not simply arguing for economic sovereignty, understood as freedom from interference; they were also arguing for an ‘expansive internationalism’ that sought to address inequality within and between states.Footnote 75

Secondly, my reconstruction of the NIEO focuses on the interplay between different possible meanings of sovereignty. The NIEO used the formal equality of sovereignty that was available to states to build a coalition of nations that demanded substantive equalization in the ability to exercise the right to regulate. It thus illustrates how different dimensions of sovereignty both cut against each other, and, at the same time, might be used strategically in support of each other.

The NIEO and the rights of investors

The demand for an NIEO developed over several decades, as newly independent nations recognized that attaining formal independence did not result in attaining actual equality with Global North nations, including their former colonizers. It emerged from discussions in the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the Group of 77 and the Non-Aligned Movement, where the continuing and even increasing inequality between nations became a subject of increasing concern.Footnote 76 It argued for the reorganization of the global economy through such measures as commodity price agreements, trade rules that favoured developing nations, debt renegotiation and technology transfers.Footnote 77

The NIEO is important to consider in the context of current debates about ISDS reform because it represented an early attempt to assert sovereign states' power over foreign investors. It attempted to defend states' rights to expropriate foreign-owned property and investments for public purposes, and even attempted to challenge the principles of compensation demanded by capital-exporting countries. In this way, it was an early precursor of today's demands for the ‘right to regulate’.

The first piece in the NIEO's approach to investment was the principle of permanent sovereignty over natural resources (PSNR). PSNR represented the basic claim that states could freely dispose of their natural resources, which was legally and politically significant for newly independent states who were bound by concessions to natural resources that had been granted under foreign rule.Footnote 78 As Antony Anghie writes, debates over PSNR implicated fundamental differences in the way Western and Third World lawyers saw the nature of sovereignty itself.Footnote 79 On the Third World view, sovereignty entailed that states could repudiate their obligations that were undertaken under colonialism, whereas on the Western view, the doctrine of state succession entailed the opposite conclusion.Footnote 80 While Western states did not directly reject states' rights to nationalize property, they insisted on the more demanding principles of compensation represented by the Hull Formula – ‘prompt, adequate, and effective’ compensation.Footnote 81

The formal recognition of PSNR by General Assembly Resolution 1803 of 1962 seemed to vindicate the Third World conception of sovereignty.Footnote 82 The preamble to the resolution notes the importance of achieving ‘economic independence’, beyond the formal independence that many states had attained by that point – and the importance of mobilizing international cooperation to that end.Footnote 83 On the matter of compensation for nationalization, the resolution, albeit somewhat ambiguously, required compensation in line with standards of domestic law. It noted that when nationalization, expropriation or requisitioning takes place on grounds of ‘public utility, security or the national interest’, ‘the owner shall be paid appropriate compensation, in accordance with the rules in force in the State taking such measures in the exercise of its sovereignty and in accordance with international law’.Footnote 84

Meanwhile, the demand for structural changes in the international economic system intensified, leading to the passage of the General Assembly's Resolution 3201 on an NIEO. This resolution noted the economic inequalities between states that continued to undermine the ‘full emancipation and progress of the developing countries and the peoples involved’.Footnote 85 It urged international cooperation to overcome these inequalities, which made developing countries more vulnerable to external economic shocks. The resolution reemphasized the idea of PSNR, and the right of states to nationalize resources or transfer ownership to nationals. In an even more radical step from Resolution 1803, it remained silent on the question of compensation and the standards that were to govern it, and instead demanded ‘restitution and full compensation’ for the exploitation of resources under foreign rule.Footnote 86

Just four months later, the General Assembly adopted the Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States – a project that had started from the ambition to create a ‘Universal Declaration of the Human Rights of Mankind to Economic Progress’.Footnote 87 Like Resolution 3201, the Charter acknowledged the ongoing economic inequalities between states, notwithstanding their formal equality and independence.Footnote 88 It again made reference to an overarching programme of reform, in which the principle of PSNR played a key role. In Article 2, the Charter clearly affirmed the principle, then explained that each state has the right to ‘regulate and exercise authority over foreign investment within its national jurisdiction in accordance with its laws and regulations and in conformity with its national objectives and priorities’. The Charter also recognized states' rights to nationalize, expropriate or transfer ownership of foreign property as long as ‘appropriate compensation’ was paid.Footnote 89

The passage of the Charter represented the high-water mark of states' rights vis-à-vis foreign investors, at least in formal proclamation if not in legal and political reality.Footnote 90 However, as my analysis has suggested, the NIEO's claims to economic sovereignty – as a precursor to today's discussions about the ‘right to regulate’ – were part of a broader programme to change the conditions in which states exercised their sovereignty.

The conditions of sovereignty

Most ambitiously, the NIEO represented a claim for international redistribution of resources, through changing the rules of international trade. It is crucial to understand the NIEO's defence of economic sovereignty in this light, as being enabled by broader changes that would enable the meaningful exercise of that economic sovereignty.Footnote 91 The proponents of the NIEO strategically used the fact of formal equality of states' sovereignty in the one-country, one-vote system of the United Nations General Assembly to argue for radical changes in the international economic system and even for transfers of wealth between nations.

One of the most central pieces of the NIEO agenda was the demand for commodity price agreements. These were agreements that would intervene in the system of international trade to increase the prices of primary commodities, including agricultural products and raw materials. Commodity price agreements were seen as necessary because developing countries' economies heavily relied on commodity exports, but as those countries argued, the price of primary commodities tended to decline over time compared to the price of manufactured goods.Footnote 92 Proposals to stabilize and increase commodity prices usually centred on controlling the supply of those commodities, for example, through export quotas for each country based on the estimated quantity of exports that would maintain prices at a certain level. The most comprehensive proposals involved directly buying commodities from producer nations to maintain an international stock of commodities, which would then be financed through a common fund. In 1974, the UNCTAD Secretariat published a series of studies advocating such an approach.Footnote 93

There was some disagreement even between developing countries about the ultimate end goal of these commodity agreements – particularly regarding whether the aim was to merely stabilize prices for commodities, which had fluctuated dramatically throughout the 1970s, or to increase them in such a way as to promote development.Footnote 94 Many insisted that the aim of the commodity agreements went beyond the mere stabilization of prices to ‘the international redistribution of income’.Footnote 95 This international redistribution required coordination, through cartelization, between commodity-exporting nations – a model whose potential success had been demonstrated through OPEC's raising of oil prices throughout the 1970s. Commodity-producing nations would have to agree to limit their exports of certain commodities for their mutual benefit.

Another piece of the NIEO agenda concerned the regulation of transnational corporations. By the 1970s, there was an increasing perception in academic and political circles that transnational corporations threatened domestic sovereignty. The Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States explicitly highlighted the regulation of transnational corporations as an object of international coordination. It stated that full PSNR also entailed the right to ‘regulate and supervise the activities of transnational corporations’. It continued, ‘Transnational corporations shall not intervene in the internal affairs of a host State. Every State should, with full regard for its sovereign rights, cooperate with other States in the exercise of [the right to regulate transnational corporations].’Footnote 96 These demands led the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) to establish a Commission on Transnational Corporations, which in turn was tasked with drafting a code of conduct for transnational corporations. As Getachew has written, the NIEO's approach to the regulation of transnational corporations reflected a complex, if not contradictory, conception of sovereignty: international law was simultaneously used to affirm states' sovereign rights to regulate corporations, and to demand the direct regulation of corporations in a way that entailed a potential restriction on sovereignty for the states in which corporations were headquartered.Footnote 97

Finally, potentially most radical of the demands that emerged from the NIEO was a system of international taxation and redistribution. In 1975, the United Nations General Assembly endorsed automatic transfers from developed, Global North nations to developing Global South nations, a proposal that was akin to an international tax. This proposal was followed up with the idea to directly tax transnational corporations and the use of international commons, among other things.Footnote 98 These demands for international redistribution again exemplify, perhaps most starkly, the NIEO's complex conception of sovereignty: in order for developing nations to be able to exercise sovereignty in a meaningful way, wealthy nations' gatekeeping of resources within their sovereign borders had to be challenged. While it may seem that there was a tension between the ideals of sovereignty and international redistribution, the tension most starkly emerges when one conceives of sovereignty as the absence of external inference, rather than as a right to regulate domestically.

These proposals gained varying levels of traction, but ultimately, even the ones that saw the light of day lost much of their bite in the process of negotiation. For example, the ‘common fund’ approach to commodity agreements never made much progress, despite years of negotiation, while much less ambitious agreements to stabilize the price of specific commodities were concluded.Footnote 99 Negotiations on the UN Code of Conduct on Transnational Corporations continued but fizzled out over the following decades.Footnote 100 Ultimately, the end of the NIEO was in large part brought by the economic crisis that befell developing countries in the latter part of the 1970s, in the wake of another oil crisis, the skyrocketing of Third World debt and the fracturing of Third World solidarity. The downfall of the NIEO was also, perhaps most importantly, due to the sustained opposition of wealthier Northern nations to the most radical aspects of its platform.Footnote 101

Still, the NIEO is worth our attention because it embodied a nuanced conception of sovereignty that recognized that the absence of interference was not enough. It represented an attempt to negotiate between different dimensions of sovereignty, by using the formal juridical equality of states to demand the conditions that would allow states to exercise their sovereign regulatory powers more effectively.

Conclusion: implications for ISDS reform today

The increasing demand for ISDS reform, among other recent developments, suggests a potential fracturing of the neoliberal consensus. As scholars have noted in other contexts, this fracturing presents both political possibility and risk, particularly the risks of encouraging nationalism and reactionary protectionism.Footnote 102 In the face of such risks, the mere right to be free from interference by international tribunals should not be the aim in ISDS reform. Instead, a more far-reaching project is necessary – one that promotes the conditions for the effective exercise of states' domestic regulatory powers. Policy proposals in areas such as international tax reform, debt reform and climate financing might be natural complements to ISDS reform that support states' rights to regulate their economies.

While the ambiguity implicit in the term ‘sovereignty’ has long been used to subordinate Global South nations, my discussion of the NIEO demonstrates that it is possible to strategically manoeuvre within this ambiguity by using certain possible meanings of sovereignty in service of others. International legal sovereignty is perhaps not as powerful as it once was during the heyday of the NIEO, before the UN General Assembly had lost much of its influence on the global stage. Yet it nonetheless remains useful for states as they negotiate BITs that govern the terms of ISDS.

Another possibility is to frame the discourse around sovereignty to explicitly centre its domestic, regulatory dimension. Westphalian sovereignty could be framed as a project in service of this domestic regulatory authority: while it is invoked to support ISDS reform, it could also be compromised to enable international agreements that would address distributive inequalities. Returning to the possibility of international tax reform, an international tax deal could bolster states' ability to tax economic activity within their borders by preventing some states from lowering their taxes, thereby preventing capital flight and tax havens.

All these demands face steep obstacles, just as the demands for an NIEO did in the 1970s. I have argued for their necessity, if not their possibility, in another critical juncture in which the institutions of global economic governance, including the institutions of investor-state dispute resolution, are at a crossroads.

Acknowledgement

The author wishes to thank Samuel Moyn, Amy Kapczynski and Reshard Kolabhai.

Competing interests

None.

Footnotes

1 While I refer primarily to bilateral investment treaties (i.e. treaties between two states), there are other kinds of investment treaties, such as multilateral investment treaties, which have similar provisions and effects. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA – now replaced by the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement or USMCA), which is referenced in this essay, is an example of a treaty between multiple states.

2 United Nations Conference for Trade and Development (UNCTAD) 2000.

3 Guzman Reference Guzman1998, 669–71.

4 More specifically, many investment treaties do not prohibit expropriation, but place conditions on it which often include the payment of compensation. See, for example, NAFTA |Article 1110; 2012 U.S. Model Bilateral Investment Treaty, Article 6. Such payment is often required to be ‘prompt, adequate, and effective’, following the so-called Hull Formula. See OECD 2004, 2.

5 OECD 2004, 2.

6 Bonnitcha Reference Bonnitcha2014, 230.

7 ICSID is a dispute settlement institution that is a part of the World Bank Group, which provides facilities for investor-state disputes. Despite the widespread criticism that this case provoked, Philip Morris v. Uruguay was ultimately concluded in favour of Uruguay. Philip Morris Brands Sàrl, Philip Morris Products S.A. and Abal Hermanos S.A. v. Oriental Republic of Uruguay, ICSID Case No. ARB/10/7, Award of 8 July 2016.

8 Eli Lilly and Company v. The Government of Canada, UNCITRAL Case No. UNCT/14/2, Final Award of 16 March 2017. This was in some ways a very exceptional case, as it involved review of Canadian courts' interpretation of their own law. See Pistor Reference Pistor2019, 140–42.

9 TransCanada Corporation and TransCanada PipeLines Limited v. The United States of America, ICSID Case No. ARB/16/21, Order of the Secretary-General Taking Note of the Discontinuance of the Proceeding, 24 March 2017; see Grewal and Adkins Reference Grewal and Adkins2016.

10 Bonnitcha Reference Bonnitcha2014, 255; Nikièma Reference Nikièma2012, 13.

11 Bonnitcha Reference Bonnitcha2014, 256.

14 Philip Morris v. Uruguay, Award, paras 286–87.

15 The literature on regulatory chill is vast; for example, see Tienhaara Reference Tienhaara, Brown and Miles2011.

17 For a comprehensive overview of measures that have already been implemented and proposed, see Dimitropoulos Reference Dimitropoulos2020a; Roberts Reference Roberts2018; Alschner Reference Alschner, Lalani and Lazo2015.

18 Arato et al., Reference Arato, Claussen and Langford2023. The WG III negotiations have been limited to purely procedural issues; one of the most notable areas of progress has been on developing a draft code of conduct for arbitrators. Some have criticized the purely procedural nature of the negotiations. See Gathii and Mbori Reference Gathii and Mbori2023, 536.

19 Many of these reforms correspond to the demands of what Anthea Roberts has called ‘paradigm shifters’, in contrast to ‘incrementalists’ and ‘systemic reformers’. Roberts Reference Roberts2018, 416–17.

20 Dimitropoulos Reference Dimitropoulos2020a, 83–84.

21 Garcia-Barragan et al., Reference Garcia-Barragan, Mitretodis and Tuck2019. The ISDS provisions only apply between the United States and Mexico, with additional constraints that did not exist in NAFTA such as resort to local remedies, and investors can no longer bring suits against Canada.

23 Polanco Reference Polanco2019, chap. 4.

24 Dimitropoulos Reference Dimitropoulos2020a, 88–91. The European Union has proposed the establishment of a bilateral investment court with permanent judges and an appellate tribunal. Guillaume Reference Guillaume2023.

25 Roberts Reference Roberts2014, 3.

26 Dimitropoulos Reference Dimitropoulos2020a, 79.

27 Footnote Ibid. The South African government has made clear its position that it rejected the international investment regime based on the view that it is ‘detrimental to public budgets, regulations in the public interest, democracy and the rule of law’. Government of South Africa 2019, 4.

28 Krasner Reference Krasner1995, 115; Srivastava Reference Srivastava2022, 12–13.

29 Ip Reference Ip2010, 637.

30 See generally Lang Reference Lang2011, which discusses international economic law in the context of the trade regime. For a more recent critique of ISDS, see Government of South Africa 2019, 3–4.

31 Koskenniemi Reference Koskenniemi2011, 68. For those that make similar arguments for taking a state- and sovereignty-centric view, see Laborde and Ronzoni Reference Laborde and Ronzoni2016, 285–86; Gumplova Reference Gumplova2020, 12–13; Singh Reference Singh2015, 163.

32 Laborde and Ronzoni Reference Laborde and Ronzoni2016, 285–86.

33 Lang Reference Lang2011, chap. 8.

34 Jackson Reference Jackson1991, 21.

35 Anghie Reference Anghie2006, 750; Orford Reference Orford1997, 450; Simpson Reference Simpson2004, 281–82; Parfitt Reference Parfitt2019, 4–5.

36 As Samuel Moyn has put it, ‘cosmopolitanism came to philosophy as an unfulfillable dream’. Moyn Reference Moyn2018, 159.

39 Ogle Reference Ogle2020, 242.

40 Footnote Ibid.; Al Attar Reference Al Attar2012, 1617–18.

41 Jackson Reference Jackson1991, 20.

42 Anghie Reference Anghie2005, 3; Parfitt Reference Parfitt2019, 9–10, 13.

43 Jackson Reference Jackson1991, 22.

44 There is an even deeper problem that arises from the imperial roots of sovereignty: that borders were drawn arbitrarily and to the benefit of European empires, which has led to deep conflicts and crises of legitimacy within the states that emerged after empire. Still, some of the most radical critiques of sovereignty that are made on this basis actually affirm the value of sovereignty as self-determination, but argue that the borders and territorial boundaries of the state should change to enable the self-determination of different groups. For example, Makau W. Mutua argues for the illegitimacy of the doctrine of sovereignty as it was imposed on Africa, because existing borders are the result of colonizers' arbitrary line-drawing on the map of Africa. These arbitrary borders have led, on Mutua's view, to a crisis of internal legitimacy within African states that have made it impossible for those states to effectively govern. However, he endorses the principle of self-determination and instead argues for a redrawing of the map of Africa. Mutua Reference Mutua1995, 1118.

46 Achiume Reference Achiume2019, 1522.

47 Orford Reference Orford1998, 180.

48 Krasner Reference Krasner1999, 10–11, emphases added. Krasner's typology of the elements of sovereignty broadly aligns with discussions in the international law literature, which tend to highlight the external vs. internal dimension of sovereignty – sovereignty as the power to make commitments vis-à-vis other states, and sovereignty as the power to control activity within the state. See, for example, Brownlie Reference Brownlie2019, 431.

49 Krasner Reference Krasner1999, 10, 13.

52 Krasner Reference Krasner1995, 119.

53 Philosophers have argued that individuals may have such obligations even if they did not cause or take part in the wrongdoing, and if they benefited involuntarily from injustice. See Butt Reference Butt2014. The imperative to rectify the harms of imperialism opens up a whole range of questions concerning the appropriate standards of liability and forms of redress, which is likely to vary depending on the precise circumstances – which I cannot adequately address here. Stahn Reference Stahn2020, 828.

54 Young Reference Young, Squires, May and Modood2004, 183. Young reaches this point through two different but related directions: feminist critiques and neo-republican critiques of the liberal conception of liberty.

56 Forere Reference Forere, Morosini and Sanchez Badin2017, 260; Isiksel Reference Isiksel2016, 339–40. For a critical analysis of another arbitral decision concerning the historical distribution of land in Southern Africa (in this case Zimbabwe), see Tzouvala Reference Tzouvala2022.

58 Department of Trade and Industry, Government of South Africa 2004, 7.

61 Tangri and Southall Reference Tangri and Southall2008, 700–701; Pargendler Reference Pargendler2023, 23.

62 Pietro Foresti, Laura de Carli & Others v. The Republic of South Africa, ICSID Case No. ARB(AF)/07/01, Award of 4 Aug. 2010, para. 79.

67 On the ongoing effects of historical events and their role in legitimating current rights and obligations, see Tzouvala Reference Tzouvala2022, 234.

68 Rodney Reference Rodney2012, 152–54. Rodney states that European investors in Southern Africa reaped consistently high profits. In Northern Rhodesia (current-day Zambia), a staggering one half of the total wealth produced in a given year during the colonial period was repatriated to Europe.

70 Nattrass Reference Nattrass1999, 375.

71 Bond Reference Bond2014, 26. For a description of how ‘retreat from the colonial world’ was accompanied by the rise of tax havens, see Ogle Reference Ogle2017, 1438–39.

73 Pargendler Reference Pargendler2023, 24. On whether BITs do in fact increase foreign direct investment as intended, see, for example, Neumayer and Spess Reference Neumayer, Spess, Sauvant and Sachs2009. See especially their survey of the literature, p. 226.

75 Getachew Reference Getachew2019, 153; Salomon Reference Salomon2013, 34.

76 Moyn Reference Moyn2018, 113–14.

77 Salomon Reference Salomon2013, 36.

79 Anghie Reference Anghie2005, 214.

82 Anghie Reference Anghie2005, 216.

83 Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources, G.A. Res. 1803, U.N. Doc. A/5217, 15.

85 Declaration on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order, G. A. Res. 3201, U.N. Doc. A/Res/3201(S-VI), 5, para. 1.

86 Footnote Ibid. at 4(e)–(f); see Abi-Saab Reference Abi-Saab and Bedjaoui1992, 605–6. Abi-Saab argues that the difference between the two documents is relatively superficial, and ‘more in the emphasis than in normative substance’.

87 Ogle Reference Ogle2014, 219.

88 Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States, G.A. Res. 3281, U.N. Doc. A/Res/3281(XXIX), 51.

90 Anghie Reference Anghie2005, 221–22.

91 Salomon Reference Salomon2013, 34.

92 Kirkpatrick and Nixson Reference Kirkpatrick and Nixson1977, 236.

93 Footnote Ibid., 247–48.

94 Dell Reference Dell1986, 25.

95 Kirkpatrick and Nixson Reference Kirkpatrick and Nixson1977, 246.

96 Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States, 52, Article 2(b).

97 Getachew Reference Getachew2019, 170–71.

98 Meyerowitz Reference Meyerowitz2021, 86.

99 Quill Reference Quill1994, 504.

101 For diagnoses of the downfall of the NIEO, see Salomon Reference Salomon2013, 46–47; Özsu Reference Özsu, Tomlins and Desautels-Stein2017, 341–42.

References

Abi-Saab, Georges. 1992. “Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources and Economic Activities.” In International Law: Achievements and Prospects, edited by Bedjaoui, Mohammad, 597617. Paris and Dordrecht: Brill Nijhoff. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004632547_040Google Scholar
Acemoglu, Daron, Johnson, Simon, and Robinson, James A.. 2001. “The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation.” The American Economic Review 91 (5): 1369–401.Google Scholar
Achiume, E. Tendayi. 2019. “Migration as Decolonization.” Stanford Law Review 71 (6): 1509–74.Google Scholar
Al Attar, Mohsen. 2012. “Counter-Revolution by Ideology? Law and Development's Vision(s) for Post-Revolutionary Egypt.” Third World Quarterly 33 (9): 1611–29. https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2012.720834Google Scholar
Alschner, Wolfgang. 2015. “The Return of the Home State and the Rise of ‘Embedded’ Investor-State Arbitration.” In The Role of the State in Investor-State Arbitration, edited by Lalani, Shaheeza and Lazo, Rodrigo Polanco, 293333. Leiden and Boston: Brill Nijhoff. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004282254_014Google Scholar
Amighetti, Sara, and Nuti, Alasia. 2016. “A Nation's Right to Exclude and the Colonies.” Political Theory 44 (4): 541–66.Google Scholar
Anghie, Antony. 2005. Imperialism, Sovereignty and the Making of International Law. Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511614262Google Scholar
Anghie, Antony. 2006. “The Evolution of International Law: Colonial and Postcolonial Realities.” Third World Quarterly 27 (5): 739–53.Google Scholar
Arato, Julian, Claussen, Kathleen, and Langford, Malcolm. 2023. “The Investor-State Dispute Settlement Reform Process: Design, Dilemmas and Discontents.” Journal of International Dispute Settlement 14 (2): 127–33. https://doi.org/10.1093/jnlids/idad004Google Scholar
Bond, Patrick. 2014. Elite Transition – Revised and Expanded Edition. Pluto Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt183p1g7Google Scholar
Bonnitcha, Jonathan, ed. 2014. “Indirect Expropriation.” In Substantive Protection under Investment Treaties: A Legal and Economic Analysis, 229–72. Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781107326361.005Google Scholar
Brownlie, Ian. 2019. Principles of Public International Law. 9th Edition. Oxford, New York: Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Brunner, Anna. 2019. “Acquired Rights and State Succession: The Rise and Fall of the Third World in the International Law Commission.” In The Battle for International Law: South-North Perspectives on the Decolonization Era, edited by von Bernstorff, Jochen and Dann, Philipp, 124–40. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198849636.003.0006Google Scholar
Butt, Daniel. 2014. “‘A Doctrine Quite New and Altogether Untenable’: Defending the Beneficiary Pays Principle.” Journal of Applied Philosophy 31 (4): 336–48. https://doi.org/10.1111/japp.12073Google Scholar
Dell, Edmund. 1986. “The Common Fund.” International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944) 63 (1): 2138. https://doi.org/10.2307/2620230Google Scholar
Department of Trade and Industry, Government of South Africa. 2004. “South Africa's Economic Transformation: A Strategy for Broad-Based Economic Empowerment.” Department of Trade and Industry.Google Scholar
Dimitropoulos, Georgios. 2020a. “National Sovereignty and International Investment Law: Sovereignty Reassertion and Prospects of Reform.” The Journal of World Investment & Trade 21 (1): 71103. https://doi.org/10.1163/22119000-12340168Google Scholar
Dimitropoulos, Georgios. 2020b. “The Conditions for Reform: A Typology of ‘Backlash’ and Lessons for Reform in International Investment Law and Arbitration.” The Law & Practice of International Courts and Tribunals 18 (3): 416–35. https://doi.org/10.1163/15718034-12341411Google Scholar
Forere, Malebakeng Agnes. 2017. “The New South African Protection of Investment Act: Striking a Balance between Attraction of FDI and Redressing the Apartheid Legacies.” In Reconceptualizing International Investment Law from the Global South, edited by Morosini, Fabio and Sanchez Badin, Michelle Ratton, 218–50. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316996812.008Google Scholar
Fraser, Nancy. 2017. “The End of Progressive Neoliberalism.” Dissent Magazine, 2 January 2017. https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/progressive-neoliberalism-reactionary-populism-nancy-fraser/Google Scholar
Garcia-Barragan, Daniel, Mitretodis, Alexandra, and Tuck, Andrew. 2019. “The New NAFTA: Scaled-Back Arbitration in the USMCA.” Journal of International Arbitration 36 (6): 739–54.Google Scholar
Gathii, James Thuo, and Mbori, Harrison Otieno. 2023. “Reform and Retrenchment in International Investment Law: Introduction to a Special Issue.” The Journal of World Investment & Trade 24 (4–5): 535–63. https://doi.org/10.1163/22119000-12340302Google Scholar
Getachew, Adom. 2019. Worldmaking after Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Government of South Africa. 2019. “Possible Reform of Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS), Submission from the Government of South Africa to the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law Working Group III (Doc A/CN.9/WG.III/WP.176).” United Nations General Assembly.Google Scholar
Grewal, David Singh, and Adkins, Cory. 2016. “Democracy and Legitimacy in Investor-State Arbitration.” The Yale Law Journal Forum 126 (June): 6576. https://www.yalelawjournal.org/forum/democracy-and-legitimacy-in-investor-state-arbitrationGoogle Scholar
Guillaume, Croisant. 2023. “Multilateral Investment Court.” Jus Mundi. 5 June 2023. https://jusmundi.com/en/document/publication/en-multilateral-investment-courtGoogle Scholar
Gumplova, Petra. 2020. “Sovereignty over Natural Resources – A Normative Reinterpretation.” Global Constitutionalism 9 (1): 737. https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045381719000224Google Scholar
Guzman, Andrew T. 1998. “Why LDCs Sign Treaties That Hurt Them: Explaining the Popularity of Bilateral Investment Treaties.” Virginia Journal of International Law 38: 639–88.Google Scholar
Gwaindepi, Abel. 2019. “Serving God and Mammon: The ‘Minerals-Railway Complex’ and Its Effects on Colonial Public Finances in the British Cape Colony, 1810–1910.” African Economic History Network Working Paper Series 2019 (44): 139. https://www.aehnetwork.org/working-papers/serving-god-and-mammon-the-minerals-railway-complex-and-its-effects-on-colonial-public-finances-in-the-british-cape-colony-1810-1910/Google Scholar
Ip, Eric C. 2010. “Globalization and the Future of the Law of the Sovereign State.” International Journal of Constitutional Law 8 (3): 636–55. https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moq033Google Scholar
Isiksel, Turkuler. 2016. “The Rights of Man and the Rights of the Man-Made: Corporations and Human Rights.” Human Rights Quarterly 38 (2): 294349.Google Scholar
Jackson, Robert H. 1991. Quasi-States: Sovereignty, International Relations and the Third World. Cambridge Studies in International Relations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511559020Google Scholar
Kawharu, Amokura. 2011. “International Law's Protection of Foreign-Owned Property against Uncompensated Expropriation: Preserving Host State Regulatory Freedom.” In Property Rights and Sustainability: The Evolution of Property Rights to Meet Ecological Challenges, edited by Grinlinton, David and Taylor, Prue, 341–64. Boston, UNITED STATES: BRILL. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/yale-ebooks/detail.action?docID=717614Google Scholar
Kirkpatrick, C. H., and Nixson, F. I.. 1977. “The New International Economic Order: Trade Policy for Primary Commodities.” British Journal of International Studies 3 (3): 233–53.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti. 2011. “What Use for Sovereignty Today?Asian Journal of International Law 1 (1): 6170. https://doi.org/10.1017/S2044251310000044Google Scholar
Krasner, Stephen D. 1995. “Compromising Westphalia.” International Security 20 (3): 115–51. https://doi.org/10.2307/2539141Google Scholar
Krasner, Stephen D. 1999. Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Laborde, Cécile, and Ronzoni, Miriam. 2016. “What Is a Free State? Republican Internationalism and Globalisation.” Political Studies 64 (2): 279–96. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9248.12190Google Scholar
Lang, Andrew. 2011. World Trade Law after Neoliberalism: Reimagining the Global Economic Order. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lienau, Odette. 2014. Rethinking Sovereign Debt. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Mann, Howard. 2015. “ISDS: Who Wins More, Investors or States?” Investment Treaty News, International Institute for Sustainable Development, June.Google Scholar
Meyerowitz, Joanne. 2021. A War on Global Poverty: The Lost Promise of Redistribution and the Rise of Microcredit. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Mishra, Ravi Dutta. 2023. “India May Drop Local Remedies Clause in New BITs as UK Trade Pact Nears.” Mint. 24 October 2023. https://www.livemint.com/news/india/india-shifts-stance-in-bit-talks-with-uk-seeks-faster-investor-state-dispute-resolution-in-new-treaty-11698164336568.htmlGoogle Scholar
Morosini, Fabio, and Badin, Michelle Raton Sanchez. 2017. “Introduction.” In Reconceptualizing International Investment Law from the Global South, edited by Morosini, Fabio, Ratton, Michelle, and Badin, Sanchez, 146. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Moyn, Samuel. 2018. Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Mutua, Makau. 1995. “Why Redraw the Map of Africa: A Moral and Legal Inquiry.” Michigan Journal of International Law 16 (4): 1113–76.Google Scholar
Nattrass, Nicoli. 1999. “The Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Business and Apartheid: A Critical Evaluation.” African Affairs 98 (392): 373–91.Google Scholar
Neumayer, Eric, and Spess, Laura. 2009. “Do Bilateral Investment Treaties Increase Foreign Direct Investment to Developing Countries?” In The Effect of Treaties on Foreign Direct Investment: Bilateral Investment Treaties, Double Taxation Treaties, and Investment Flows, edited by Sauvant, Karl P. and Sachs, Lisa E., 225–52. New York: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195388534.003.0007Google Scholar
Nikièma, Suzy H. 2012. “Best Practices: Indirect Expropriation.” International Institute for Sustainable Development. https://www.iisd.org/publications/guide/best-practices-indirect-expropriationGoogle Scholar
OECD. 2004. “‘Indirect Expropriation’ and the ‘Right to Regulate’ in International Investment Law.” Paris: OECD. https://doi.org/10.1787/780155872321Google Scholar
Ogle, Vanessa. 2014. “State Rights against Private Capital: The ‘New International Economic Order’ and the Struggle over Aid, Trade, and Foreign Investment, 1962–1981.” Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development 5 (2): 211–34.Google Scholar
Ogle, Vanessa. 2017. “Archipelago Capitalism: Tax Havens, Offshore Money, and the State, 1950s–1970s.” The American Historical Review 122 (5): 1431–58.Google Scholar
Ogle, Vanessa. 2020. “‘Funk Money’: The End of Empires, The Expansion of Tax Havens, and Decolonization as an Economic and Financial Event*.” Past & Present 249 (1): 213–49. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtaa001Google Scholar
Orford, Anne. 1997. “Locating the International: Military and Monetary Interventions after the Cold War.” Harvard International Law Journal 38 (2): 443–86.Google Scholar
Orford, Anne. 1998. “Contesting Globalization: A Feminist Perspective on the Future of Human Rights Symposium: International Human Rights at Fifty: A Symposium to Commemmorate the 50th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 8 (2): 171–98.Google Scholar
Özsu, Umut. 2017. “Neoliberalism and the New International Economic Order: A History of ‘Contemporary Legal Thought’.” In Searching for Contemporary Legal Thought, edited by Tomlins, Christopher and Desautels-Stein, Justin, 330–47. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316584361.018Google Scholar
Parfitt, Rose. 2019. The Process of International Legal Reproduction: Inequality, Historiography, Resistance. Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108655118Google Scholar
Pargendler, Mariana. 2023. “Corporate Law in the Global South: Heterodox Stakeholderism.” European Corporate Governance Institute Working Paper Series in Law Working Paper No. 718/2023 (October).Google Scholar
Pistor, Katharina. 2019. The Code of Capital: How the Law Creates Wealth and Inequality. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Polanco, Rodrigo. 2019. The Return of the Home State to Investor-State Disputes: Bringing Back Diplomatic Protection? Cambridge International Trade and Economic Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108628983Google Scholar
Quill, Edward. 1994. “The Failure of International Commodity Agreements: Forms, Functions, and Implications.” Denver Journal of International Law & Policy 22 (2): 503–39. https://digitalcommons.du.edu/djilp/vol22/iss2/8Google Scholar
Roberts, Anthea. 2014. “State-to-State Investment Treaty Arbitration: A Hybrid Theory of Interdependent Rights and Shared Interpretive Authority.” Harvard International Law Journal 55 (1): 170.Google Scholar
Roberts, Anthea. 2018. “Incremental, Systemic, and Paradigmatic Reform of Investor-State Arbitration.” American Journal of International Law 112 (3): 410–32. https://doi.org/10.1017/ajil.2018.69Google Scholar
Rodney, Walter. 2012. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. Cape Town: Pambazuka Press.Google Scholar
Salomon, Margot E. 2013. “From NIEO to Now and the Unfinishable Story of Economic Justice.” The International and Comparative Law Quarterly 62 (1): 3154.Google Scholar
Schneiderman, David. 2009. “Promoting Equality, Black Economic Empowerment, and the Future of Investment Rules.” South African Journal on Human Rights 25 (2): 246–79. https://doi.org/10.1080/19962126.2009.11865202Google Scholar
Simpson, Gerry, ed. 2004. “Outlaw States: 1999.” In Great Powers and Outlaw States: Unequal Sovereigns in the International Legal Order, 278316. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511494185.012Google Scholar
Singh, Sahib. 2015. “The Fundamental Rights of States in Neoliberal Times Foreword.” Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law 4 (3): 461–66.Google Scholar
Srivastava, Swati. 2022. Hybrid Sovereignty in World Politics. Cambridge Studies in International Relations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009204453Google Scholar
Staggs Kelsall, Michelle. 2021. “Poisonous Flowers on the Dust-Heap of a Dying Capitalism: The United Nations Code of Conduct on Transnational Corporations, Contingency and Failure in International Law.” In Contingency in International Law: On the Possibility of Different Legal Histories, edited by Venzke, Ingo and Heller, Kevin Jon, 463–78. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192898036.003.0027Google Scholar
Stahn, Carsten. 2020. “Reckoning with Colonial Injustice: International Law as Culprit and as Remedy?Leiden Journal of International Law 33 (4): 823–35. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0922156520000370Google Scholar
Tangri, Roger, and Southall, Roger. 2008. “The Politics of Black Economic Empowerment in South Africa.” Journal of Southern African Studies 34 (3): 699716.Google Scholar
Tienhaara, Kyla. 2011. “Regulatory Chill and the Threat of Arbitration: A View from Political Science.” In Evolution in Investment Treaty Law and Arbitration, edited by Brown, Chester and Miles, Kate, 606–28. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139043809.034Google Scholar
Titi, Catharine. 2018. “Police Powers Doctrine and International Investment Law.” In General Principles of Law and International Investment Arbitration, edited by Gattini, Andrea, Tanzi, Attila, and Fontanelli, Filippo, 323–43. Boston, USA: BRILL. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/yale-ebooks/detail.action?docID=5449722Google Scholar
Tzouvala, Ntina. 2022. “Invested in Whiteness: Zimbabwe, the von Pezold Arbitration, and the Question of Race in International Law.” Journal of Law and Political Economy 2 (2): 226–51. https://doi.org/10.5070/LP62258226Google Scholar
United Nations Conference for Trade and Development (UNCTAD). 2000. “Bilateral Investment Treaties Quintupled During the 1990s.” 15 December 2000. https://unctad.org/press-material/bilateral-investment-treaties-quintupled-during-1990sGoogle Scholar
Young, Iris Marion. 2004. “Two Concepts of Self-Determination.” In Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Minority Rights, edited by Squires, Judith, May, Stephen, and Modood, Tariq, 176–96. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511489235.009Google Scholar