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- Compensation Under Investment Treaties: What are the problems and what . . .
Investment treaties allow covered foreign investors to bring claims that a host state has breached the treaty to international arbitration If the arbitral tribunal concludes that the host state has breached the treaty, it will order the host state to compensate the investor
- Compensation Standards - Jus Mundi
When the violation does not have an effect equivalent to an expropriation, tribunals decide on the amount of compensation based on the nature and extent of the damages claimed by the investor
- The Guide to Damages in International Arbitration
Nearly all bilateral and multilateral investment treaties provide for compensation in cases of lawful expropriation 30 The four traditional elements of legal expropriation are that the expropriation must be undertaken (1) for a public purpose, (2) in accordance with due process, (3) in a non-discriminatory fashion, and (4) upon payment of
- Compensation | The Award in International Investment Arbitration . . .
This chapter provides an overview of compensation in investment arbitrations, including the basis for the right to compensation, the standards of compensation, and the most common methods for calculation of compensation
- Damages in the International Arbitration Paper
The arbitrator held that the claimant was entitled to compensation for the loss suffered (damnum emergens), for example the expenses incurred in performing the contract, and the loss of profit (lucrum cessans)
- COMPENSATION IN INVESTMENT ARBITRATION
Investment arbitration different as a practical matter? However, in Investor-State Arbitration, compensation is the prevailing remedy
- Compensation - Jus Mundi
To award compensation, investor-State tribunals must first find that the respondent State has breached its treaty obligations (e , committed an international wrongful act), i e may not order compensation without a treaty violation
- Moral Damages Due to Loss of Reputation in Investment Arbitration: A . . .
In this article, the author intends to analyse the threshold of reputational damage that would make a reasonable claim for moral damages to succeed in the field of investment arbitration
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