I. Introduction
The rule of law is a concept with many meanings across legal and political systems, which emerged at domestic level and has progressively been transferred to international level.Footnote 1 As an expression of liberal democracy, it places restrictions on the exercise of regulatory powers of State rather than duties on citizens. Given different interpretations, the consensus primarily exists about its formal characteristics or the narrow, or ‘thin’ concept of the rule of law: laws should be known, internally consistent, and be applied equally to all by an independent judiciary. In substantive terms, the broader of ‘thick’ concept of the rule of law focuses on the issue of the rules’ values – it considers the content of legal norms and their compliance with concepts such as human rights and justice.Footnote 2 Since no universal consensus on substantive standards exists (for example, States disagree on the scope and content of property rights or individual libertiesFootnote 3 ), broader conceptualisation of the rule of law is rather political. It is used to distinguish between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ laws, depending on whether the laws in question comply with substantive rights and standards, which are derived from the rule of law.Footnote 4 Nevertheless, the formal aspects of the rule of law ensure the functionality of the legal system, which is a necessary condition of the broader substantive concept.Footnote 5 International rule of law thus aims to emphasise the non-political nature of rules and its constraints on international politics.Footnote 6
Protection of foreign investment in international law has been painted by an array of tensions since its beginnings. The underlying ideological and geopolitical divisions prompted the development of international investment law, with a view that law should take precedence over power in this important and lucrative sphere of international relations. If we accept that questions about the rule of law are, in its essence, primarily questions about control of law over power,Footnote 7 then the rule of law was the core reason for the creation of international investment law. Several decades fast forward, and many developments in between, the rule of law is still the core consideration in the assessment of international investment lawFootnote 8 and its ongoing reform. While there is no consensus on what exactly the rule of law is, the ongoing reform processes at different levels are seeking to ensure and, in many aspects, correct the balance of power between different actors, interests and considerations that have shaped the international investment governance.
This paper builds upon the existing scholarship and considers the application of the rule of law in the field of international investment law, particularly critiquing different perspectives on the rule of law that shape the ongoing ISDS reform(s). It starts with a brief overview of tensions in international investment law and links them to the rule-of-law concerns relevant for the ISDS reform debate. It proceeds by examining the current ISDS regime through the prism of the rule of law, engaging with its many meanings and characteristics. The emphasis is placed on formal and procedural elements of the rule of law (‘thin’ rule of law) and systemic issues, which are linked to substantive issues (‘thick’ rule of law) only to the extent necessary to critique the law’s presumed neutrality. Finally, the paper concludes by providing rule-of-law reflections on the reform options and particularly, considers the change of the dispute resolution paradigm – from arbitration to a court, as proposed by the EU. Given the political difficulty of addressing substantive imbalances of international investment law, the paper considers whether the reform of its dispute settlement mechanism could be the key to enhancing the rule of law of the system. The rule of law in the context of this paper is used as a normative concept, encompassing a range of more specific rules, to analyse, compare and discuss current and potential developments in international investment law, beyond the significance of this term in specific positive rules of international investment law.Footnote 9
II. International investment law: tensions, reform challenges and the rule of law rationale
International investment law sets standards by which States must treat foreign investors. These standards include substantive and procedural rights, and most notably, an option for foreign investors to sue their host State before a tribunal independent from that State, through investment treaty arbitration. This dispute settlement mechanism is popularly known as ISDS, and it has thrived over the last two decades, contributing to significant developments in international law. At the same time, the flaws of this system have also crystalised, leading States to address them through legal reform processes – at bilateral, regional and global levels. Most significantly, since 2017 States have participated in the multilateral reform of ISDS, which is taking place under the auspices of the UN Commission for International Trade Law (UNCITRAL). The reform has exposed a number of tensions within and outside the system, as well as challenges stemming from the legal design and operation of international investment law. These issues in its essence concern different aspects of the rule of law, which accordingly serves as a normative goal of the reform.
1. Politics of international investment law
There are underlying ideological and geopolitical interests and consequent tensions, which have driven the development of international investment regulation, but which are still equally present today. The earliest period was dominated by discords about the minimum standard of treatment (MST) of foreign investments under customary international law (CIL), emerged as a reaction to the US attempts for economic dominance in Latin America. In the aftermath of decolonisation, the disagreement about the level of appropriate protection standards continued to dominate the debate, now within a more global context. Along the lines of the Cold War bipolar world, a network of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) emerged between capital-importing developing countries, who supported the State-controlled approach to economy, and capitalist economies of the capital-exporting developed countries. Western investors feared the lack of effective protection, while developing countries were concerned that Western States would undermine their State sovereignty through the economic activities of their investors. The International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in Washington was established to provide a neutral and depoliticised forum for the resolution of potential investment disputes, in its essence as an expression of the rule of law approach to the protection of foreign investment in international law.
Following the fall of communism, and with the rise of globalisation and free trade, an extra layer of complexity has been added. New global economic governance meant closer economic integration between countries of different economic development. Divisions between capital-importing and capital-exporting countries blurred as many States now perform both functions. In addition, transnational elites and private capital operating in world markets emerged as significant players. New liberal global order has prompted the growth of international investment law, despite its mixed economic benefits.Footnote 10 Ultimately, it has also led to domestic-level divisions and as a result, populism influencing foreign trade and investment policies.
A series of different global crises – from financial to existential, prompted an increased State interventionism in the markets, only convincing the proponents (foreign investors, arbitration practitioners) about the legal salience of the ISDS system, intended to restrict arbitrary powers of States. On the other hand, the opponents (non-business civil society) have emphasised the undermining impact of ISDS on the domestic rule of law – primarily in weakening the reach and authority of domestic courts.Footnote 11 The rise of investment treaty arbitration brought to States an awareness of possible negative implications of international investment treaties, not only because of large monetary compensationsFootnote 12 but also due to the increased limitations on government regulatory powers – the so-called “regulatory chill.”Footnote 13
Climate change debate and energy transition have only exacerbated disagreements, bringing new ideological dimension to the debate. On the one hand, ISDS could provide protections for much needed investment of private capital in clean energy transition; on the other, it is a key limitation to effective phase-out of fossil fuel investments. The Energy Charter Treaty (ECT), as the most litigated international investment agreement in the world, reinvigorated the opposition to ISDS, particularly in Europe.Footnote 14 Concerns over ISDS regulatory impact on climate policies are shared by other developed StatesFootnote 15 as well as climate change experts. Footnote 16 It is the pressure of international law (eg 2015 Paris Agreement obligations),Footnote 17 the objective of climate neutrality, and the cost for developed States, that might eventually turn the tide against international investment law.
At the same time, with different armed conflicts already raging or looming in different parts of the world, international investment law could once again prove effective in separating economic disputes from international politics, while invertedly, also politicising them. Since 2014, Ukrainian investors have utilised international arbitration claims against Russia for damages arising from its unlawful occupation of Crimea, albeit not without controversy regarding the territorial reach of Russia’s investment agreements.Footnote 18 It has further been suggested that sanctioned Russian assets, which are frozen in Western countries, could be utilised for enforcement of investment awards.Footnote 19 At the same time, Russia also seem to be contemplating how international investment law mechanisms could be utilised to access its frozen funds abroad.Footnote 20
These recent examples continue to demonstrate Janus-faced character of international investment law as both a foe and a friend of international politics. On the one hand, depoliticisation purpose of international investment law ultimately depends on the perceptions and perspectives of different actors taking part in the regime (namely, host and home States, investor, or dispute settlement process itself), especially in the modern context.Footnote 21 On the other hand, the availability of a neutral process to settle political disputes has achieved a certain level of depoliticisation, diverting investment disputes from the exercise of diplomatic protection, particularly in the ICSID context.Footnote 22
2. International investment law in the international legal order
In addition to a complex political constellation of relations between different actors, which law is supposed to bridge in a rule-of-law-system, international investment regime is also subject to different legal tensions which are undermining, or at least, could be seen as undermining the rule of law in international investment law.Footnote 23 Over 2500 different investment treaties that are in force are interpreted by hundreds of ad hoc tribunals, with no appellate mechanism which would be a check for correctness and consistency of investment awards. As a general rule, there is no system of precedent in international law.Footnote 24 While arbitrators emphasise the need for proper consideration of earlier cases as their “moral duty” in fostering a predictable normative environment,Footnote 25 and tribunals express willingness to treat earlier awards as persuasive evidence,Footnote 26 practice has not ensured legal certainty. Fragmentation is a striking characteristic of international investment law, and its inconsistency a significant problem.Footnote 27 However, these concerns have also wider impact for the international rule of law.
The dispute settlement mechanism of international investment law has also exacerbated the broader problem of fragmentation in international law, with increasing normative and jurisdictional conflicts between different international law subdisciplines or “regimes.” These conflicts have been the most evident in relation to EU law, with a clash with jurisdiction over intra-EU investment disputes between international investment tribunals and the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU).Footnote 28 However, they also persist in relation to general international lawFootnote 29 and other regimes (eg environmental law,Footnote 30 human rights,Footnote 31 trade law,Footnote 32 etc) and undermine the coherency of international law, and thus also the rule of law.Footnote 33 Fragmentation can be linked to more general issue of specialisation, which has coincided with globalisation and the move from State-centred international law, giving an impression of a metamorphosis of international law from political into apparently apolitical and technical law.Footnote 34
Disciplinary bias related to specialisation in international law is nothing unique to international investment law. Given the open-ended rules of modern international law, rules in a particular subfield have become the instrument of the discipline itself, determined by the manner in which the relevant institution understands its mission.Footnote 35 However, in international investment law this is further complicated by the nature of its character. Is it a public law or a private law regime? On the one hand, it deals with the relationship between the individual (foreign investor) and the State, which would be classified as public law domain, and which is of classical concern for the rule of law. At the same time, the dispute settlement is adopted from commercial arbitration, which is a private law mechanism for resolving disputes. Consequently, the regime is characterised by tensions between private and public interests, typically seen in administrative law.Footnote 36 International investment arbitration has thus been viewed as a product of historical “experiments,” which contributed to evolution of international law from a State-centred system to an international regime for the protection of private rights, grounded in public international law.Footnote 37 Dealing with such complex regulatory context thus requires diversified legal approaches.
However, international investment arbitrators predominantly come from private law background. The field has been subject to criticism for functioning as a small pool of highly influential and powerful individuals with interchangeable roles (arbitrator, legal counsel, expert witness, tribunal secretary), which are at times even performed simultaneously – the (in)famous “double-hatting.”Footnote 38 In addition, the majority of arbitrators is from the global North, while the majority of respondent States from the global South, or transitional economies in the European context. The field thus lacks diversity necessary to properly appreciate cultural subtleties of legal facts, particularly when they concern domestic laws.Footnote 39 While appreciating the need for specific expertise, empirical research thus raises different questions related to impartiality of arbitrators and suitability of the discipline to deal with significant issues of public interest.
Given the design of investment treaty arbitration, fragmentation poses an additional problem of institutional bias. Institutional bias concerns the interpretation of treaty provisions related to a tribunal’s jurisdiction (parallel proceedings, treaty shopping, forum shopping). It has been argued that arbitrators, who are appointed on a case-by-case basis, have an inherent financial interest in adopting a more expansive interpretation of treaties, which can stimulate the ISDS industry.Footnote 40 While empirical studies remain inconclusive, from a normative perspective there are characteristics of the system which bring into question its institutional independence: asymmetrical claims structure allowing only investors to initiate proceedings, party autonomy in arbitral appointments, and related conflicts of interest. Both independence from external factors (and related institutional bias) and impartiality from internal factors (and related disciplinary bias) have the potential to undermine procedural fairness (the rule against bias), and thus also the rule of law.
Finally, openness and in particular, transparency plays a key role for the rule of law, ensuring scrutiny and accountability of the system to the public. They allow for the assessment of a tribunal’s application of rules in a fair and unbiased manner. Confidentiality of investment treaty arbitration has been the key aspect of public criticism of ISDS, seen as promoting a “privatised justice system for global corporations.”Footnote 41 Greater openness and transparency have thus been the objective of a number of reforms, at the level of procedural rulesFootnote 42 and in the new IIAs.Footnote 43 While new rules have brought improvements, the process still remains controlled by the parties and dependant on the tribunals’ discretion, favouring the interests of the disputing parties before the interest of the public participation in the process.Footnote 44 Access to justice is primarily focused on enabling greater use of the system by small and medium enterprises (SMEs),Footnote 45 including through improvements of the controversial third party funding,Footnote 46 but the access to the system for other parties (eg domestic stakeholders) which might have an interest in the proceedings, remains largely limited.
Incremental reform proposals enhancing the rule of law of investment treaty arbitration are many and ongoing. Identified concerns of the UNCITRAL reform demonstrate a narrow rule-of-law-rationale of the reform, focusing on the procedural aspects of ISDS, rather than a more comprehensive reform of international investment law.Footnote 47 At bilateral and regional levels, States are making efforts to update their old BITs, introduce “modern” model BITs and conclude a new generation of international investment agreements (IIAs), seeking to, again incrementally, improve both substantive and procedural rules of international investment law, and only in some instances, more significantly restrict the protections offered to foreign investors. In its essence, these different approaches to reform demonstrate different perspectives on the rule of law in international investment law, to which we turn next.
III. The rule of law perspectives on international investment law
Given the character of the international legal system, which is often criticised by legal positivists and political realists through the compliance lens,Footnote 48 it could be argued that the mere existence of a dispute settlement and enforcement mechanism supports an international rule of law.Footnote 49 Accordingly, the very existence of ISDS, in combination with enforceable awards as the “essential” feature of the system,Footnote 50 contributes to the international rule of law. In addition, and as already discussed, ISDS ensures protection of private rights of foreigners against arbitrary and undue State interference. In particular, the Fair and Equitable treatment (FET) embodies a number of formal rule-of-law principles (eg stability, predictability and consistency, legality, due process, protection against discrimination and arbitrariness), as the expression of the requirement of the rule of law in domestic legal systems.Footnote 51 International investment law, therefore, at least in principle, complies with the core idea of the rule of law, guaranteeing supremacy of international law over the arbitrary power of foreign investors’ host States in domestic legal systems.Footnote 52
While subject to criticism, there is at least some form of consensus among States about the utility of international investment law, as they continue “modernising” its treaties and reforming ISDS in the UNCITRAL. These reforms address different aspects of the rule of law and demonstrate State perspectives on the implementation of this meta-principle in international investment law.
1. Substantive rule of law: “neutrality” of international investment law?
In theory, the concept of the rule of law is understood as a formal (narrow, thin) and substantive (broader, thick) concept. Formal conceptions of the rule of law focus on formal legality of laws in constraining arbitrary government power, with a view to ensure law’s neutrality.Footnote 53 At the domestic level, this concerns the effective system of checks and balances between the different branches of government, leaving the question of what the law should be to the legislator, and the question of what the law is, as applied with minimal discretion in each particular case, to the courts. The application of laws by the judiciary is thus normatively neutral and objective, clearly separating law from politics and economics. Building upon formal characteristics of laws, substantive rule of law considers the content of legal norms and their compliance with concepts such as human rights and justice.Footnote 54 The rule of law in international investment law thus concerns not only ISDS procedures and their compliance with the principles of procedural legality, in particular independence and impartiality of international investment tribunals.Footnote 55 It also requires that IIAs comply with formal legality as a minimum which can limit arbitrariness of decision-makers (investment tribunals) in the implementation of these agreements and ensure neutrality of laws.
One problem of IIAs, especially the so-called “old” generation agreements, are their vague provisions, which had left to arbitrators a wide discretion to interpret them. This has resulted in divergent interpretations of similar treaty provisions, which have been justified by the specifics of each case.Footnote 56 In the system of numerous treaties and ad hoc tribunals, with no clear hierarchy of rules, diverse jurisprudence presents difficulties in settling on what is the dominant rule and what are the exceptions.Footnote 57 At the same time, it is claimed that those outside the system – whether lawyers or the public – lack knowledge to properly understand complex rules and procedures. The mystique of legal expertise thus cloaks the system, undermining the rule of law in the aspects of the laws’ predictability, logical consistency, stability and enforceability in practice.Footnote 58
The logic of law’s neutrality is difficult to transpose into the international context, given that international law seeks to provide a flexible framework for cooperation rather than determining legal standards.Footnote 59 Law must thus ensure that “correctness” – which guarantees the distance of law from natural justice theories (what law should be), and “normativity” – which guarantees the distance between the law and actual State behaviour or its interests, are seen as neutral.Footnote 60 However, the more the rule is “normatively” distanced from State practice, the more political it seems, as it cannot be related to the States’ social context.Footnote 61
In the realm of international investment law, “correctness” is ensured by procedural correctness before a neutral forum, which seeks to depoliticise disputes between foreign investors and States, while “normativity” refers to the standard of applicable rules in this process and their outcomes – a tribunal’s decision in each case. Correctness of the process thus disguises normativity (substance) by claiming to apply the “correct” standard of review to a State’s behaviour, detached from politics. However, if the process produces outcomes (decisions) detached from the State’s social context, it will be seen as political from the perspective of that State and its domestic constituencies – as bias in favour of, for example, more powerful State players (Western States), or in favour of private rights, interests or capital (multinational enterprises, the legal profession). Therefore, to speak of correctness, even if procedural, means taking a normative stance on what “correct” is – and that is inherently political.
This brings us to the core question of what is the “correct” standard in international law, and who should set it – States or investment tribunals? For economists of law, the appropriate standard is determined with reference to a State’s interference in the functioning of the market. The role of the rule of law is thus to provide good governance – a stable framework in which individuals can plan their actions and realise their choices, rather than the State making choices on their behalf.Footnote 62 The substantive ideal of distributive justice is thus inevitably a form of arbitrary government, incompatible with formal laws enshrined in the rule of law.
The State is to provide a predictable framework in which investors can plan their investments and know with certainty that their private rights (property and freedom of contract) will be protected and favoured against State action. IIAs serve to ensure such legal framework, recognising a State’s “right to regulate” as negative freedom and government constraint.Footnote 63 Investment treaty arbitration provides “neutral” mechanism for enforcement of these rights, while the system’s close alliance with the World Bank through ICSID ensures its effectiveness.Footnote 64
The neutrality of law also guarantees law’s equality, as one of the fundamental principles of the rule of law. While international investment law poses questions about reverse discrimination – favouring foreign investors vis-à-vis domestic ones – this inherent bias of the system is acceptable in the service of good governance and as a precondition of the overall economic growth. Its promotion is considered non-political as it addresses the “application of rules rather than their substance.”Footnote 65 Accordingly, this type of “governance,” which replaces formal “government” and its democratic accountability with more ambivalent delegation of formal authority to international structures,Footnote 66 is a justified exception from the principle of formal equality.
In light of broad IIA provisions, through which States have effectively delegated the “lawmaking” functions and standard setting to international investment tribunals as the decision-makers, States are now taking measures to reverse this trend. Recent agreements have more specific provisions defining investors’ rights and different types of provisions aimed at protecting public interest (eg right-to-regulate clauses,Footnote 67 carve-out clauses, reference to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) soft law commitmentsFootnote 68 ), thus seeking to ensure better private–public balance in substantive clauses. Other types of clauses focus on limiting or excluding jurisdictional access to ISDS (eg duty to comply with the host State’s laws,Footnote 69 frivolous claims, corruption or other process abusesFootnote 70 ) and increasing State opportunities for utilising defences and counterclaims.Footnote 71 However, these improvements still leave the affected third parties without a procedural remedy under international law and do not reverse the inherent discrimination of the system between domestic subjects and foreign investors.Footnote 72
Another issue is the effectiveness of these reform attempts given the fragmented manner in which the system operates. New studies demonstrate that tribunals continue to interpret new treaties like the old ones,Footnote 73 and in some cases demonstrating insufficiency of public policy carve-outs for excluding States’ liability for compensation.Footnote 74 Attempts to correct tribunals’ interpretations that stray from States’ intentions, values and objectives ex-post – through interpretative statements – also have limitations. In some cases, tribunals have not been willing to accept them,Footnote 75 while in others, it might be difficult for States to agree on a more specific interpretation, which in its core concerns the same disagreements that the creation of ISDS attempted to address.
2. Procedural rule of law: balance of power through the change of paradigm?
Given the political difficulty of addressing substantive imbalances of international investment law, the next question is whether the reform of its dispute settlement mechanism could be the key to enhancing the rule of law. Even more, could the change of paradigm – from arbitration to a court – more effectively address the problem?
Procedural reform could enhance the rule of law in international investment governance, by more prominently implementing natural justice principles – procedural fairness (due process) and the rule against bias (nemo iudex in causa sua). Procedural requirements of the rule of law are also institutional in character: a court with judges whose independence from political influence is guaranteed; its procedures, reasoning and decisions open to public scrutiny; and legal methods implemented more consistently, that could ensure better equilibrium between different interests, in particular between the foreign investors’ rights and public policy goals. The enhanced rule of law could in turn also lead to more legitimacy. With proper institutional design, the system could perhaps become more just, while also being seen as more just – at least by some stakeholders.
The motivation to address ISDS controversies has driven the multilateral reform in the UNCITRAL since 2017, with a broad mandate given to its Working Group III to identify concerns and develop appropriate recommendations.Footnote 76 The major limitation of the process is its core focus on procedural aspects of ISDS, with cross-cutting issues (eg dispute prevention, exhaustion of local remedies third-party participation; counterclaims; regulatory chill; and calculation of damages) having ancillary relevance, and only where intersecting with procedural issues, thus receiving insufficient attention overall. Since April 2019, the reform has entered its final Phase III, with a number of reform options in consideration, which are to be presented to the UNCITRAL Commission for the “approval in principle” in a staggered manner.Footnote 77 Flexibility and consensus have been the guiding principles of the reform, with a view to integrate the ongoing work of relevant international organisations and “allowing each State the choice of whether and to what extent it wished to adopt the relevant solution(s).”Footnote 78
While the UNCITRAL reform process is ongoing and set to conclude by the end of 2025, it is clear that maintaining arbitration remains the preferred mode of the dispute settlement in the field. The reform process is aimed at producing a multilateral framework, which would sufficiently harmonise different rules, while leaving flexibility to States to choose those options that most suit them.Footnote 79 The core aspects of the reform involve improving different aspects of the procedure,Footnote 80 addressing accountability of arbitrators through a Code of Conduct,Footnote 81 and setting up a Multilateral Advisory Centre.Footnote 82 As part of that broader framework, States could choose a more ambitious approach and “opt in” to new institutions, such as an appellate mechanism with arbitration in the first instance – supported by China, and a Multilateral Investment Court (MIC) – supported by the EU.
While initially highly politicised, in the post-Covid-19 period, the process has entered into technical discussions stage, more typical for UNCITRAL, however still demonstrating difficulties of reaching a consensus, even on issues which are considered “non-structural” and necessary. The Code of Conduct, after being delayed for almost a year, falls short on prohibiting “double-hatting”Footnote 83 and providing an enforcement mechanism, which was initially envisaged as a key component of the Code.Footnote 84 For the moment, and until incorporated into a multilateral instrument on ISDS reform, the Code will apply on a voluntary basis, in addition to the existing instruments.Footnote 85 This adds to the complexity and fragmentation in the field but it also demonstrates a piecemeal and trade-offs approach to reforms, which is unlikely to bring more profound change of the system.
Contrasted to this approach, the EU is proposing what it has coined as a “systemic response” to all identified UNCITRAL’s concerns, which also accommodates the demand for flexibility. An MIC would combine judicial independence with an appellate mechanism.Footnote 86 As the reform advances, this proposal has distinguished itself from other options, in particular with respect to independence of judges with full-time office in a permanent body, as opposed to ad hoc arbitrators.Footnote 87 Further, the EU’s approach seeks to ensure integration of other mechanisms (eg standing appellate mechanism) and avenues for a “dialogue” between the treaty parties, which should guarantee long-term State control over the interpretation of IIAs.Footnote 88 In this way, the EU envisages to ensure a single authoritative judicial interpretation, which would eventually lead to more consistency, while also providing mechanisms to address situations when court’s interpretation “strays” from the State’s intended effects of treaty provisions.
The EU vision of independence reduces the autonomy of private parties as the core element of the traditional ISDS system while seeking to guarantee the independence of the new MIC from the host State, in line with the established ISDS narrative. The work of the court is further subject to public scrutiny, with an aim to changes the narrative of ISDS from a secretive transnational private justice system into an international court specialised for investment disputes. This EU vision of the rule of law in the form of a court goes to the heart of arbitration as the defining element of ISDS, shifting the private law character of investment treaty arbitration towards a public law paradigm in international investment law. No other reform option goes as far in its vision of enhancing transparency and independence of ISDS proceedings.
The court would encompass jurisdiction for the existing EU’s IIAs (only a few in place, none of which have yet entered into force) and over 1300 EU Member States’ extra-EU BITs, which are mainly old-type BITs. The Court should also integrate other procedural elements already integrated in new EU IIAs – such as its approach to consultations prior to the initiation of main proceedings, parallel claims, denial of benefits, transparency, third-party funding, etcFootnote 89 as well as some other features of the EU system (eg selection of judges to MIC reflects procedures for the selection of the CJEU judges).
However, as the new court would rely on the underlying substantive rules of the existing IIAs, it remains to be seen how “systemic” the reform would actually be. The difficulty of the continuous application of the existing substantive rules is the underlying private law paradigm of IIAs – an arbitration agreement, which would remain the basis of claims submitted to a new international court. It is, however, possible, that the court adopts new interpretations, embraces a wider spectrum of values and cultures, and a bigger margin of appreciation for domestic policies. While EU IIAs largely integrate the practice of modern investment treaties, they also incorporate EU law by ensuring that international investment law standards do not conflict with the fundamental principles of EU law and the right of the EU to regulate.Footnote 90 The proposed court could thus also contribute to developing a new normative framework in international investment law.
While a new MIC, if established, would in principle bring ISDS closer to a more classical conception of the rule of law, the exact extent of its normative contribution to the international rule of law would depend on the Statute of the new court, its members and its procedures. Given the EU’s leading role in the creation of the court, and in light of the current proposals, the MIC’s framework would likely reflect the EU’s vision of international investment law, even if the court is eventually established under the auspices of the UN. While this could lead to a more coherent EU international investment regulation in the long-term, it will also add to overall complexity and fragmentation in international investment law.
3. Thinking beyond the rule of law: ISDS as an Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanism?
The evaluation of international investment law requires consideration of the specific character of arbitration as an ADR mechanism in the sphere of business disputes. Such analysis takes into account different set of criteria: efficiency, flexibility, specialisation through party autonomy, confidentiality and continuous relationships between subjects. In this context, legitimacy of the system is measured by business correlations, whereby some of the main points of international investment law’s controversy become the main incentives for the parties to engage in international arbitration. Therefore, it has been argued that the types of control mechanisms used in domestic contexts are not appropriate for international arbitration and, instead, involvement of other international institutions rather than domestic courts would be preferred.Footnote 91
For investors, arbitration should retain its private law character, with party autonomy, efficiency and effectiveness of enforcement as its core advantages. Control mechanisms should ensure balance between “consistency,” “correctness” and “finality.”Footnote 92 Accordingly, absolute consistency would undermine correctness,Footnote 93 which requires flexibility in applying the law to the facts of each particular case; while an appellate mechanism would favour consistency against correctness and finality. Instead, the control should be ensured by parties’ scrutiny.Footnote 94 This vision thus further endorses the private law character of ISDS, and directly contradicts its conceptualisation as a public law system, as envisaged by the EU. As long as investors have recourse to arbitration through restructuring their investment, it is unlikely that they would favour a court.Footnote 95
On the other hand, States face the challenge of balancing their commercial hat with the public hat in the framework of ISDS. Under their commercial hat, States will prefer a more efficient private system of dispute settlement, and mutually beneficial control mechanisms, aimed at maintaining business relationship.Footnote 96 However, under the public law hat, States prefer authoritative interpretations of public policy obtained through courts, which are seen as better placed to settle disputes about value differences (who is right) as opposed to disputes about interests (who gets what).Footnote 97 Accordingly, the preferred dispute settlement mechanism will depend on the perceived State functions in each particular case. As States contemplate ISDS reforms, perhaps the core question for them to consider is whether the change of the dispute resolution paradigm would give them more control over setting the standards in international investment law, which so significantly affect their domestic policy processes.
In domestic contexts, there is an overall evident shift from public (courts) to privatised justice through a range of ADR mechanisms. What sets apart these mechanisms from ISDS is the recourse to domestic courts, which ultimately ensures domestic court control over ADR, guaranteeing compliance with public policy and the rule of law. On the contrary, ISDS has been created as a fully internationalised system, with a view to avoid the control of domestic courts. Further, its effects on the domestic rule of law remain inconclusive.Footnote 98 On the one hand, high compensations can lead to “regulatory chill,” discouraging States from regulating in the public interest. In addition, investment tribunals cannot mandate removal of illegal domestic measures, which would contribute to the rule of law in the long term. This is the key point of difference between international investment law and EU law, which due to its supranational character has more “intrusive” effects on domestic legal orders of its Member States. The replacement of investment treaty arbitration with judicial mechanisms of the EU legal order in inter se Member States relations could thus have positive effects on the international rule of law, at least in the long term.Footnote 99 However, in the short- and mid-term, uncertainty around enforcement of intra-EU awards and incoherency between practices of domestic courts in the EU and those outside the EU, has undermining effects on the international rule of law.Footnote 100
IV. Conclusion
International investment law shifts the domestic judicial control over States’ legislative and executive action in issues of public importance, from domestic courts to international arbitration tribunals. By favouring arbitration as an international private law mechanism over domestic courts, ISDS disturbs the domestic democratic process of checks and balances. The complexity of this field of international law is further magnified by its internal fragmentation, contributing to the wider phenomenon of fragmentation in international law. With a large number of legal instruments, the reform processes in international investment law also display their fragmented character, aimed at flexibility to accommodate different State preferences in their regulation of foreign investment.
In light of reform developments and proposals, international investment law is likely to continue evolving between different degrees of private and public justice. Various multilateral proposals in the UNCITRAL differently strike the balance between the private nature of ISDS and the need for public oversight – from improving the current mechanism to creating new institutions – including a new international court, which should in its essence reflect the EU’s vision of the rule of law in international investment law.
The main limitation of the multilateral process is its scope, which avoids politically difficult questions of substance, narrowing itself to the classical formal questions of the rule of law. Can the procedural reform, which avoids the issues of substance, achieve consensus on the desired normative goals? The institutional reform should at least provide some clarity on jurisdictional issues – who and on what basis decides whether a dispute should be adjudicated by the investment dispute settlement body. This will not address the substantive injustices of the current system; however, issues of substance and related balance between private and public interest also depend on these preliminary jurisdictional issues.
While arbitration is likely to remain the dominant and preferred method of ISDS, there are also views among renowned practitioners that it will decline, at least in certain parts of the world, and will have a more limited reach, with likely return to the origins of ICSID and contractual mechanisms of foreign investment protection.Footnote 101 This would shift foreign investment protection further into the commercial sphere and give more control to States, but it would inevitably also favour larger investors in the key sectors, with more bargaining power.
Flexibility, fragmentation and complexity in international investment law are likely to remain as key features of the system. Despite the different visions among the States and other actors, consensus exists on at least one element of the rule of law: the dispute settlement mechanism in international investment law must produce enforceable decisions. While effective enforcement endorses the core element of the international rule of law, as opposed to the rule of law at the domestic level, it will prove more complex for the proponents of new institutions in the field of international investment law.