Original HRC document

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Document Type: Final Report

Date: 2015 Jul

Session: 30th Regular Session (2015 Sep)

Agenda Item: Item3: Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development

Human Rights Council Thirtieth session

Agenda item 3

Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,

political, economic, social and cultural rights,

including the right to development

Report of the Independent Expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order, Alfred-Maurice de Zayas*

Summary

This report addresses adverse human rights impacts of international investment

agreements, bilateral investment treaties and multilateral free trade agreements on the

international order, both from the procedural aspect of their elaboration, negotiation,

adoption and implementation, and from the substantive side, focusing on their

constitutionality and effects on democratic governance, including the exercise of the State’s

regulatory functions to advance the enjoyment of civil, cultural, economic, political and

social rights. It calls for ex ante and ex post human rights, health and environmental impact

assessments, and proposes a plan of action for systemic change.

Because all States are bound by the Charter of the United Nations, all treaties must

conform with it, in particular with Articles 1, 2, 55 and 56. While recognizing that

globalization may contribute to human rights and development, experience suggests that

human rights have frequently been subordinated to dogmas of market fundamentalism with

a focus on profit rather than sustainable development. Article 103 of the Charter of the

United Nations stipulates that “[i]n the event of conflict between the obligations of the

Members of the United Nations under the present Charter and their obligations under any

other international agreement, their obligations under the present Charter shall prevail”.

Accordingly, international investment agreements and investor–State dispute settlement

agreements must be tested for conformity with the Charter of the United Nations and never

undermine the ontological State function to ensure the welfare of all persons under its

jurisdiction, nor lead to retrogression in human rights. Conflicting agreements or arbitral

awards are incompatible with international ordre public, and may be considered contrary to

provisions of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties and invalid as contra bonos

mores.

* The annex to the present report is circulated as received, in the language of submission only.

There is an emerging customary international law of human rights reflecting a

consensus that human rights provisions in international agreements, including International

Labour Organization (ILO) and World Health Organization (WHO) Conventions,

constitute an internationally binding legal regime with erga omnes implications. The

Independent Expert invites United Nations expert committees, as well as regional human

rights courts to reaffirm the precedence of human rights over other treaties. He also invites

the General Assembly and United Nations specialized agencies like ILO and WHO to refer

pertinent legal questions to the International Court of Justice for advisory opinions. He also

invites the Human Rights Council through the universal periodic review and all Special

Procedures pursuant to their mandates to review the conformity of these treaties with

human rights norms.

Contents

Page

I. Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 4

II. Investment versus human rights protection ...................................................................................... 6

III. Investor–State dispute settlement: a challenge to democracy and the rule of law ............................ 9

IV. Normative framework ...................................................................................................................... 13

V. Systemic reform ............................................................................................................................... 15

VI. Outlook ............................................................................................................................................. 17

VII. Plan of action.................................................................................................................................... 19

VIII. Postscript ......................................................................................................................................... 24

Annex .......................................................................................................................................................... 25

I. Introduction

1. Pursuant to Human Rights Council resolutions 18/6, 21/9, 25/15 and 27/9, the

Independent Expert has endeavoured to identify obstacles to the realization of a democratic

and equitable international order, including lack of transparency and accountability

(A/HRC/21/45 and A/67/277), lack of genuine democratic participation in domestic and

global decision-making (A/HRC/24/38), asymmetric economic, financial and trade

practices (A/68/284), military expenditures (A/HRC/27/51) and denial of self-determination

(A/69/272).

2. In this report, the Independent Expert addresses the adverse impacts of free trade

and investment agreements, whether bilateral or multilateral, on the international order. The

report to the General Assembly will focus on the impacts of investor–State dispute

settlement arbitrations. The Independent Expert has relied on the advice of economists and

given attention to the reports of other Special Procedures mandate holders, including the

Special Rapporteur on the right to food (A/HRC/19/59/Add.5 and A/HRC/10/5/Add.2); the

Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable

standard of physical and mental health;1 the Special Rapporteur on the human right to safe

drinking water and sanitation;2 the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human

rights;3 the Independent Expert on the effects of foreign debt and other related international

financial obligations of States on the full enjoyment of all human rights, particularly

economic, social and cultural rights;4 the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges

and lawyers; the Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of

association (A/HRC/29/25); the former Special Representative of the Secretary-General on

human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises;5 and the

Working Group on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other

business enterprises (A/HRC/29/28, paras. 30–31). He strongly endorses articles 1 to 10 of

the 2011 Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (A/HRC/17/31, annex) and the

United Nations “Protect, Respect and Remedy” Framework.6 He relies on pertinent general

comments and concluding observations of treaty bodies including the Human Rights

Committee, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and the Committee

on the Rights of the Child. He welcomes the perceptive diagnoses, recent conferences and

pertinent reform initiatives by UNCTAD.7

3. Advocates of free trade and investment agreements may question the analysis in this

report because of a lack of hands-on experience. Critics, however, cannot delegitimize the

1 A/69/299, A/HRC/11/12 and A/HRC/20/15/Add.2. See also E/CN.4/2005/51/Add.3 and

www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/SForum/SForum2015/DainiusPuras.pdf.

2 “Extraterritorial violations may occur, for example, when … (d) States fail to respect human rights or

restrict the ability of others to comply with their human rights obligations in the process of

elaborating, applying and interpreting international trade and investment agreements” (A/HRC/27/55,

para. 71).

3 “States should take into account their international human rights obligations when designing and

implementing all policies, including international trade, taxation, fiscal, monetary, environmental and

investment policies” (A/HRC/21/39, para. 61).

4 Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky and Juan Bautista Justo, “The conventionality control of investment

arbitrations: enhancing coherence through dialogue”, Transnational Dispute Management, vol. 10,

No. 1 (2013), pp. 1–12.

5 John Ruggie. See www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Business/Pages/SRSGTransCorpIndex.aspx.

6 business-humanrights.org/en/un-secretary-generals-special-representative-on-business-human-

rights/un-protect-respect-and-remedy-framework-and-guiding-principles.

7 UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2015, Trade and Development Report 2014.

human rights recommendations contained herein, which correspond to the Human Rights

Council’s resolutions pertaining to the mandate. An international order of sovereign and

equal States under the Charter of the United Nations, committed to the rule of law,

transparency and accountability must not be undermined by private attempts to replace it

with an international order ruled by transnational enterprises lacking democratic legitimacy.

4. This preliminary report on a complex and multifaceted subject does not question the

axiom that, in principle, free trade is a good thing that has promoted development for

centuries. A breakdown in trade can even usher economic contraction, as happened with the

decline of the Roman Empire into the “dark ages”. Although bilateral investment treaties

and free trade agreements may foster international exchanges, one should not be so

optimistic as to equate trade with welfare or to pretend that “[o]ne could almost say that

trade is human rights in practice”.8 Given that tariffs are already low, do they need to be

reduced further at the expense of domestic regulation of social policy? The focus has

shifted to non-trade barriers, which many countries — both developed and developing —

maintain to protect their domestic markets. Some observers contend that bilateral

investment treaties and free trade agreements are geopolitical constructs having little to do

with trade liberalization, while others like Professor Yash Tandon point to the history of

trade as a form of imposing economic dominance.9 In any case, a sensible compromise that

allows foreign direct investment while ensuring the protection of human rights10 is possible,

as recognized by the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. Such obligations

are derived from customary law and treaty law, notably the International Covenant on Civil

and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural

Rights. By definition, every State’s legitimacy depends on its ability to advance the welfare

of the population under its jurisdiction. Every State under the rule of law must fulfil this

responsibility and cannot divest itself of human rights obligations by outsourcing or

privatizing activities that are fundamentally State functions. Before and after entering into

international investment agreements, States should conduct human rights, health and

environmental impact assessments.11

5. Many observers have expressed concern about certain investor–State dispute

settlement arbitrations that have effectively overridden the State’s fulfilment of its function

to regulate domestic labour, health and environmental policies, and have had adverse

8 Pascal Lamy (former Director-General of the World Trade Organization (WTO)), “Towards shared

responsibility and greater coherence: human rights, trade and macroeconomic policy”, speech at the

Colloquium on Human Rights in the Global Economy, Geneva, 13 January 2010. Available from

www.wto.org/english/news_e/sppl_e/sppl146_e.htm.

9 Yash Tandon, Trade is War: the West’s War against the World (OR Books, 2015). See also the

history of the Opium Wars to force the opening of China to European trade in Jack Beeching, The

Chinese Opium Wars (Orlando, Florida, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975); and Susanna Hoe and

Derek Roebuck, The Taking of Hong Kong: Charles and Clara Elliot in China Waters (Richmond,

Surrey, Curzon Press, 1999).

10 See Stephan W. Schill (ed.), International Investment Law and Comparative Public Law (Oxford

University Press, 2010); Joseph François et al., “Reducing transatlantic barriers to trade and

investment: an economic assessment”, IIDE Discussion Paper No. 20130401(Institute for

International and Development Economics, 2013); V. S. Seshadri, “Trans-Atlantic trade and

investment partnership”, RIS Discussion Paper No. 185 (New Delhi, Research and Information

Systems for Developing Countries, 2013); Jeffrey J. Schott and Cathleen Cimino, “Crafting a

transatlantic trade and investment partnership: what can be done”, Policy Brief No. PB13-8

(Washington, D.C., Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2013); and U.S. Business

Coalition for TPP, “VOICES: Asia-Pacific Policy Experts Support TPP”, 28 April 2015, available

from tppcoalition.org/voices-asia-pacific-policy-experts-support-tpp-and-tpa.

11 See A/HRC/19/59/Add.5; www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/food/docs/report_hria-seminar_2010.pdf

and www.humanrights.dk/business/impact-assessment.

human rights impacts, also on third parties, including a “chilling effect” with regard to the

exercise of democratic governance. Arbitration tribunals are credible institutions only when

they operate in a demonstrably independent, transparent and accountable manner, as

required under article 14 (1) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

concerning suits at law. Investor–State dispute settlement tribunals do not operate in a

separate legal context, but are bound by the erga omnes obligations imposed by the

international human rights regime,12 which permeates all areas of human activity, including

by non-State actors. Some observers consider certain arbitration awards frivolous and

manifestly ill-founded, yet not appealable.

6. A fundamental problem arises concerning the tension between legally binding

human rights treaties and the operation of international investment agreements. As

Bohoslavsky has observed: “There is a need for coherence in order to avoid the

fragmentation of an international legal order that aspires to legality and, consequently,

consistency.”13

II. Investment protection versus human rights protection

7. “Corporations everywhere may well agree that getting rid of regulations would be

good for corporate profits. Trade negotiators might be persuaded that these trade

agreements would be good for trade and corporate profits. But there would be some big

losers – namely, the rest of us.”14

8. International investment agreements are not new phenomena in the international

arena. Bilateral investment treaties currently number over 3,200. After years of experience

with investor–State dispute settlement, the International Centre for Settlement of

Investment Disputes (ICSID) and other arbitrations, it has become apparent that the

regulatory function of many States and their ability to legislate in the public interest have

been compromised. The problem has been aggravated by the chilling effect of certain

awards that have penalized States for adopting regulations to protect the environment, food

safety, access to generic medicine and reduction of smoking, as required under the WHO

Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. The legality of such awards is questionable as

contrary to domestic and international ordre public, and may be considered, in some cases,

contra bonos mores.

9. Observers have noted retrogression in the protection of rights including the rights to

life,15 food (A/HRC/25/57), water and sanitation,16 health, housing, education, culture,

12 Bruno Simma and Theodore Kill, “Harmonizing investment protection and human rights: first steps

towards a methodology”, in Christina Binder et al. (eds.), International Investment Law for the 21st

Century: Essays in Honour of Christoph Schreuer (Oxford University Press, 2009).

13 Bohoslavsky (see footnote 4 above), p. 10. See also the report of the Study Group of the International

Law Commission on fragmentation of international law: difficulties arising from the diversification

and expansion of international law, Yearbook of the International Law Commission 2006, vol. II (Part

Two), para. 251.

14 Joseph Siglitz, “On the wrong side of globalization”, New York Times, 15 March 2014. See also Pope

Francis’ statement http://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/elpais/1-276806-2015-07-10.html

15 The right to life is impacted when a person dies because of lack of access to medicine because

pharmaceutical monopolies have “privatized knowledge” and, through “evergreening” of patents,

delay or make the introduction of significantly cheaper generic medicine impossible. The right to life

is also violated when farmers and other labourers have their livelihoods destroyed by “free trade”

without protective governmental action. For instance, bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements impacted millions of farmers in India and caused a significant rise in suicides, see

improved labour standards, an independent judiciary, a clean environment and the right not

to be subjected to forced resettlement. Moreover, there is a legitimate concern that

international investment agreements might aggravate the problem of extreme poverty,17

foreign debt renegotiation, financial regulation and the rights of indigenous peoples,

minorities, persons with disabilities and older persons and other vulnerable groups.

10. The Working Group on business and human rights has stressed in its reports that the

Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights stipulate in principles 8 and 9 that

“States should ensure that governmental departments, agencies and other State-based

institutions that shape business practices are aware of and observe the State’s human rights

obligations” and that “States should maintain adequate domestic policy space to meet their

human rights obligations when pursuing business-related policy objectives with other States

or business enterprises, for instance through investment treaties or contracts”. Accordingly,

all international investment agreements under negotiation should include a clear provision

stipulating that in case of conflict between the human rights obligations of a State and those

under other treaties, human rights conventions prevail.

11. The 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is an example of an

agreement that has led to relocation of manufacturing industries, resulting in loss of

employment in the United States (estimated at 850,000 jobs) and the proliferation of

assembly centres in Mexico, known as maquiladoras,18 where labour costs are lower and

social protection below ILO standards. NAFTA “provided investors with a unique set of

guarantees designed to stimulate foreign direct investment and the movement of factories

within the hemisphere … . Furthermore, no protections were contained in the core of the

agreement to maintain labor or environmental standards. As a result, NAFTA tilted the

economic playing field in favor of investors, and against workers and the environment”.19

Several international investment agreements are currently being negotiated, mostly in

secret, including the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), the Trade in

Services Agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Regional Comprehensive

Economic Partnership.20

12. Numerous scholars and Nobel prize laureates in economics have already signalled

the dangers to democratic governance and human rights. Stiglitz states: “These agreements

Devinder Sharma, “‘Free’ trade killing farmers in India”, November 2007, available from

www.bilaterals.org/?free-trade-killing-farmers-in.

16 www.cepal.org/es/publicaciones/3839-proteccion-del-derecho-humano-al-agua-y-arbitrajes-de-

inversionhttp://cap-net-esp.org/document/document/181/agua_y_saneamiento_

tratados_de_protecci%C3%B3n_a_las_inversiones.pdf.

17 www.globalresearch.ca/the-free-trade-agreements-the-asia-europe-peoples-forum-call-to-

action/5416888?print=1.

18 See www.hrw.org/news/1996/08/17/mexicos-maquiladoras-abuses-against-women-workers;

sdmaquila.blogspot.ch/2010/02/maquiladoras-101-english.html; and www.researchgate.net.

publication/266820089_Human_rights_violations_in_the_Maquiladora_Industry.

19 Robert E. Scott, “The high price of ‘free’ trade: NAFTA’s failure has cost the United States jobs

across the nation”, Briefing paper No. 147, Economic Policy Institute, 17 November 2003, available

from www.epi.org/publication/briefingpapers_bp147.

20 See www.mfat.govt.nz/Trade-and-Economic-Relations/2-Trade-Relationships-and-

Agreements/RCEP/; donttradeourlivesaway.wordpress.com/2015/06/11/press-statement-civil-society-

raises-major-concerns-on-indias-engagement-with-the-massive-rcep-trade-deal/; and trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2006/december/tradoc_118238.pdf. The European Free Trade

Association is also negotiating free trade agreements: see

www.asean.org/images/2012/documents/Guiding%20Principles%20

and%20Objectives%20for%20Negotiating%20the%20Regional%20Comprehensive%20Economic%2

0Partnership.pdf.

go well beyond trade, governing investment and intellectual property as well, imposing

fundamental changes to countries’ legal, judicial, and regulatory frameworks, without input

or accountability through democratic institutions. Perhaps the most invidious — and most

dishonest — part of such agreements concerns investor protection. Of course, investors

have to be protected against the risk that rogue governments will seize their property. But

that is not what these provisions are about. There have been very few expropriations in

recent decades, and investors who want to protect themselves can buy insurance from the

Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, a World Bank affiliate (the US and other

governments provide similar insurance). … The real intent of these provisions is to impede

health, environmental, safety, and, yes, even financial regulations.”21 With regard to

developing countries, the 2014 report of the United Nations Conference on Trade and

Development (UNCTAD) further notes: “Foreign capital flows to developing and transition

economies may support investment, economic diversification and growth, or generate

macroeconomic instability, external imbalances and boom-and-bust-credit episodes. … For

macroprudential and developmental reasons, governments need sufficient policy space to

be able to manage foreign capital flows, influence their amount and composition, and

channel them to productive uses.”22 This correctly points out that foreign direct investment

and other capital flows can generate problems in areas beyond human rights.

13. Observers have noted grave democratic deficits with international investment

agreements and investor–State dispute settlement tribunals and wondered why States

continue to engage in negotiations, based on partisan studies and overly optimistic forecasts

about gross domestic product (GDP) growth and employment. Not only is there a failure of

States to proactively disclose information about the agreements, but key stakeholders are

excluded from the negotiating table, where mostly corporate lawyers and lobbyists23

participate. There is even an attempt to circumvent parliaments by “fast-tracking” the

adoption of these agreements, manifesting a gross absence of due process and hence of

democratic legitimacy.

14. There is no lack of good diagnoses about the challenge. The problem lies in part in

an anachronistic and uncritical commitment to the philosophy of market fundamentalism.

Joseph writes perceptively: “Free trade is not an end in itself. … The fervour with which

free trade advocates continue to promote their cause is astonishing.”24 Stiglitz notes the lack

of empirical evidence that trade liberalization has significantly increased GDP and

employment, notwithstanding dogmatic assertions to that effect and amazingly optimistic

forecasts for agreements currently under consideration.25 As Joseph observes, because trade

law spills over into other areas of law, the desire for certainty cannot legitimately

quarantine trade rules from allegedly non-trade considerations such as human rights and

21 www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/us-secret-corporate-takeover-by-joseph-e--stiglitz-2015-05.

22 Trade and Development Report, 2014 p. 145. Available from

http://unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/tdr2014_en.pdf. See also UNCTAD World Investment Report

2015: Reforming the International Investment Regime.

23 See www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/business/trade-advisory-committees/index.html.;

big.assets.huffingtonpost.com/WarrenBrownTPPLetter.pdf; corporateeurope.org/

pressreleases/2014/07/agribusiness-biggest-lobbyist-eu-us-trade-deal-new-research-reveals;

www.publicintegrity.org/2005/07/07/5786/drug-lobby-second-none;

www.citizen.org/documents/egregious-investor-state-attacks-case-studies.pdf; and

www.opensecrets.org/lobby/methodology.php.

24 Sarah Joseph, Blame it on the WTO? A Human Rights Critique (Oxford University Press, 2011),

p. 288.

25 Joseph Stiglitz and Andrew Charlton, Fair Trade for All: How Trade can Promote Development

(Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 34.

labour standards.26 With regard to ongoing negotiations on the TTIP, Capaldo questions

current assumptions and the projections: “Projections by different institutions have been

shown to rely on the same Computable General Equilibrium Model that has proven

inadequate as a tool for trade policy analysis. … [W]e assess the effects of TTIP using the

United Nations Global Policy Model, which incorporates more sensible assumptions on

macroeconomic adjustment, employment dynamics, and global trade. We project that TTIP

will lead to a contraction of GDP, personal incomes and employment. We also project an

increase in financial instability and a continuing downward trend in the labor share of

GDP.”27

III. InvestorState dispute settlement: a challenge to democracy and the rule of law28

15. Among the major threats to a democratic and equitable international order is the

operation of arbitral tribunals that act as if they were above the international human rights

regime. Investor–State dispute settlement tribunals are made up of corporate arbitrators

whose independence has been repeatedly questioned because of conflicts of interest.29

Admittedly, corporate arbitrators are not natural guardians of the public interest, but of

business interests and of a new “industry” that, as experience shows, has privileged

investors over the public. The investor–State dispute settlement system entails a completely

separate system of dispute settlement, not only outside the domestic court system, but

above it, and without appeal. The mind reverts to Juvenal’s question quis custodiet ipsos

custodes? (“who guards the guardians?”). Can a democracy call itself democratic if it

allows the creation of separate, non-transparent and non-accountable systems of dispute

settlement?

16. Observers question the legitimacy of tribunals where the investor can sue the State

but not vice versa.30 Interpretations of terms such as “investment”, “expropriation” and “fair

26 Joseph (see footnote 23 above), citing Frank Garcia, “The global market and human rights: trading

away the human rights principle”, Brooklyn Journal of International Law, vol. 7 (1999), p. 51, at p.

65. See also Jeronim Capaldo, “The Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership: European

disintegration, unemployment and instability”, GDAE Working Paper No. 14-03, Global

Development and Environment Institute at Tufts University, available from

http://ase.tufts.edu/gdae/policy_research/ttip_simulations.html.

27 Capaldo (see footnote above).

28 For investor–State dispute settlement cases in the database of publicly available investment cases

under investment chapters of free trade agreements and bilateral investment treaties, searchable by

type of policy challenged by investor (for example, environment), but not updated after May 2010,

see www.iiapp.org/. For texts of awards in investor–State dispute settlement cases, see

www.italaw.com and unctad.org/en/Pages/DIAE/investor–State dispute settlement.aspx. See also

www.baerbel-hoehn.de/fileadmin/media/MdB/baerbelhoehn_de/www_baerbelhoehn_de/investor–

State dispute settlement_TAFTA_Bundestag.pdf; and

www.iisd.org/pdf/2011/int_investment_law_and_sd_key_cases_2010.pdf.

29 See Pia Eberhardt and Cecilia Olivet, Profiting from Injustice: How Law Firms, Arbitrators and

Financiers are Fuelling an Investment Arbitration Boom (Corporate Europe Observatory, Brussels,

2012), available from www.tni.org/sites/www.tni.org/files/download/profitingfrominjustice.pdf;

acta.ffii.org/?p=2118; corporateeurope.org/sites/default/files/annex-2-still-not-loving-isds.pdf;

corporateeurope.org/international-trade/2014/07/

commission-isds-reform-plan-echo-chamber-business-views; www.bilaterals.org/?investor-to-state-

dispute; and www.italaw.com/sites/default/files/case-documents/ita0221.pdf.

30 See John Hendy, “A threat to the sovereignty of courts and parliaments”, Graya, No. 128 (2015),

pp. 52–56.

and equal treatment” have been expansive and difficult to reconcile with the interpretation

rules under articles 31 and 32 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties. Experience

shows that arbitrators interpret international investment agreements without human rights

or environmental constraints. Their procedures are not transparent and it is not even known

how many arbitrations have actually taken place, because most of them are not published.

What becomes apparent is the strong business bias of the arbitrators and their feeling of

being immune to general principles of law. In a 2012 report, UNCTAD noted that an

“expansive interpretation of minimalist treaty language can give rise to a lack of

predictability in the application of the standard. This, in turn, may lead to the undermining

of legitimate State intervention for economic, social, environmental and other development

ends”.31

17. Spanish arbitrator Fernández-Armesto notes: “When I wake up at night and think

about arbitration, it never ceases to amaze me that sovereign states have agreed to

investment arbitration at all … Three private individuals are entrusted with the power to

review, without any restriction or appeal procedure, all actions of the government, all

decisions of the courts, and all laws and regulations emanating from parliament.”32 Indeed,

it is disturbing that arbitrators can disregard basic principles such as respect for the “margin

of discretion” of States, State legislation and even the judicial pronouncements of the

highest domestic courts. The one-way street of investor protection has not contributed to a

culture of investor–State cooperation but fuelled an aggressive tendency to litigate and

demonstrably generated a “regulatory chill”. Arbitration may take place in Washington

under the auspices of the World Bank’s ICSID, but there is a worrisome degree of forum-

shopping, and tribunals may meet before the London Court of International Arbitration, the

International Chamber of Commerce, the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce, the Hong

Kong International Arbitration Centre or the United Nations Commission on International

Trade Law (UNCITRAL). There is a growing number of arbitrations that privilege profit

over human rights.33 According to UNCTAD, many investor–State dispute settlement

arbitrations are completely confidential and information is available only regarding some

608 awards.34 The Independent Expert refers to his forthcoming report to the General

Assembly and flags a few cases in order to illustrate litigation practices and their human

rights implications.

18. In 2013, Lone Pine, a Calgary-based company registered in the United States sued

Canada not under Canadian law, but under chapter 11 of NAFTA, challenging the

moratorium by Quebec on fracking. The company did not give Canada time to weigh

scientific studies showing that some fracking chemicals include carcinogens and hazardous

air pollutants justifying preventive measures.35 Lone Pine contends that the moratorium is

“arbitrary” and “capricious,” and that it expropriates Lone Pine’s profit.

19. Ethyl Corporation, a Virginia corporation with a Canadian subsidiary, submitted a

claim alleging that a Canadian statute banning imports of the gasoline additive MMT

31 Fair and Equitable Treatment (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.11.II.D.15), p. 2.

32 www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/04/us-trade-deal-full-frontal-assault-on-democracy.

33 European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, “Human rights inapplicable in international

investment arbitration?”, available from www.ecchr.de/worldbank/articles/human-rights-inapplicable-

in-international-investment-arbitration.html.

34 UNCTAD, IIA Issues Note, No. 1 (February 2015), available from

unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/webdiaepcb2015d1_en.pdf.

35 commonsensecanadian.ca/quebec-fracking-nafta-challenge-right-water-right-profit/.

breached the obligations of Canada. Rather than fight, Canada withdrew the ban,

notwithstanding health dangers.36

20. Metalclad v. Mexico involved a corporation suing Mexico for refusing to allow it to

build a waste disposal which would pollute the Mexican water supply. The arbitrators

granted Metalclad $16.79 million in compensation for lost profits.37

21. In 2013, the French transnational Veolia sued Egypt because of alleged loss of

expected profits as a result of Egypt raising the minimum wage. The amount in controversy

is $82 million.38

22. Aguas del Turani S.A. v. Republic of Bolivia concerned a contract privatizing the

water supply of Cochabamba, including 40-year concessions with a guaranteed annual cash

flow. The deal was endorsed by the World Bank, which imposed privatization as a

condition for credit. The majority shareholders of Aguas were the American company

Bechtel and the Spanish multinational Abengoa. After the contract was implemented in

1999, water prices increased sharply. When people demonstrated for their right to an

affordable water supply, the then-Government declared martial law and tried to quell

protests by military force. After the death of a 17-year-old adolescent, the Plurinational

State of Bolivia cancelled the privatization contract and Aguas sued for $50 million.39

23. In 2009, the Swedish energy conglomerate Vattenfall sued Germany under the

Energy Charter Treaty, demanding 1.4 billion euros in compensation for environmental

measures restricting the use and discharge of cooling water into the River Elbe. Only after

Germany agreed to lower its environmental standards was settlement reached, with adverse

effects on the river and wildlife.40 Following the Fukushima disaster, the German public

demanded the closure of nuclear plants and the Government of Germany decided on a

phase-out of nuclear energy. Vattenfall is currently seeking 4 billion in compensation.41

24. One of the most egregious ICSID arbitrations concerned the case by United States-

based Occidental Petroleum against Ecuador concerning the termination of an oil

production site in the Amazon, and resulting in an award of $1.76 billion to Occidental

($2.4 billion with interest), which Ecuador accused of multiple human rights violations and

environmental destruction.42

36 www.international.gc.ca/trade-agreements-accords-commerciaux/topics-domaines/disp-

diff/ethyl.aspx?lang=eng and www.citizen.org/documents/egregious-investor-state-attacks-case-

studies.pdf.

37 www.citizen.org/documents/NAFTAReport_Final.pdf and solidarity-us.org/node/977.

See also www.baerbel-hoehn.de/fileadmin/media/MdB/baerbelhoehn_de/

www_baerbelhoehn_de/ISDS_TAFTA_Bundestag.pdf and

www.oecd.org/daf/inv/internationalinvestmentagreements/40077817.pdf.

38 www.elstel.org/ISDS.html.en; infojustice.org/archives/34113.

39 www.citizen.org/cmep/article_redirect.cfm?ID=9208,

documents.foodandwaterwatch.org/doc/ICSID_web.pdf and www.elstel.org/ISDS.html.en.

40 www.italaw.com/cases/documents/1655. Nathalie Bernasconi, “Background paper on Vattenfall v.

Germany”, IISD; Rechtsanwälte Günther (2012) Briefing Note. The Coal-fired Power Plant

Hamburg-Moorburg.

41 www.fr-online.de/energie/atomausstieg-vattenfall-fordert-milliarden,1473634,21169258.html Power

Shift (2012) Der deutsche Atomausstieg auf dem Prüfstand eines internationalen

Investionsschiedsgericths? Hintergründe zum neuen Streitfall Vattenfall gegen Deutschland.

www.iisd.org/pdf/2012/powershift_forum_briefing_vattenfall.pdf.

42 One of the worst aspects of this case is that Ecuador was justified in terminating Occidental’s permit

under Ecuadorian law and the contract and still the investor–State dispute settlement tribunal

penalised Ecuador, www.citizen.org/documents/oxy-v-ecuador-memo.pdf.

25. In Philip Morris (Switzerland) v. Uruguay (2010), the multinational sued under the

Switzerland–Uruguay bilateral investment treaty claiming that the Uruguayan anti-smoking

legislation devalued its investments, blithely disregarding the WHO Framework

Convention on Tobacco Control.43 WHO submitted an amicus curiae brief.

26. In 2009, an Ecuadorian court fined Chevron for environmental damage caused by its

activities. Chevron refused to pay and turned to UNCITRAL to demand damages from

Ecuador for lost profits.44 Litigation is pending.

27. When Philip Morris filed a claim against Australia45 in 2011 challenging the

Australian measures to reduce tobacco consumption, the Government stated that it rejected

investor–State dispute settlement “provisions that would confer greater legal rights on

foreign businesses than those available to domestic businesses. … The Government has not

and will not accept provisions that limit its capacity to put health warnings or plain

packaging requirements on tobacco products or its ability to continue the Pharmaceutical

Benefits Scheme. … If Australian businesses are concerned about sovereign risk in

Australian trading partner countries, they will need to make their own assessments about

whether they want to commit to investing in those countries.”46

28. Only gradually are governments and parliamentarians beginning to counter the

corporate move against the fundamentals of State sovereignty. In the European Parliament,

the issue of corporate blackmail has been raised in connection with the debate on the TTIP,

arguing on the basis of Vattenfall and Veolia that multinational companies are using

investor protection rules to achieve corporate aims, increasing the cost to the taxpayer of

defending public policy and rules. A concept paper of the European Commission,

“Investment in TTIP and beyond – the path for reform”,47 outlines possible improvements

in free trade agreement models so as to guarantee the State’s policy space. Experience has

shown that self-regulation has proven insufficient,48 notwithstanding the Guiding Principles

on Business and Human Rights, which should be made legally binding by treaty. In this

context, it must be stressed that the possibility that arbitrations may find for the State and

against the investor does not remove the danger nor legitimize the investor–State dispute

settlement model, since the mere threat of such arbitration has dissuaded even developed

States like Canada from adopting social legislation. Developing countries are even more

vulnerable to the threat,49 since they lack the resources to defend themselves against major

transnational enterprises.

29. The manifest abuse of rights by investors is so brazen that one could imagine that

one day the military-industrial complex might invoke investor–State dispute settlement

when a country decides to reduce or terminate the production of anti-personnel landmines

43 www.iisd.org/itn/2011/07/12/philip-morris-v-uruguay-will-investor-state-arbitration-send-

restrictions-on-tobacco-marketing-up-in-smoke/.

44 www.italaw.com/cases/257. See also truth-out.org/news/item/23788, fpif.org/nafta-20-model-

corporate-rule/, and content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2053075,00.html.

45 www.italaw.com/cases/851 and /www.iisd.org/itn/2011/07/12/philip-morris-v-uruguay-will-investor-

state-arbitration-send-restrictions-on-tobacco-marketing-up-in-smoke/. 46 www.acci.asn.au/getattachment/b9d3cfae-fc0c-4c2a-a3df-3f58228daf6d/Gillard-Government-Trade-

Policy-Statement.aspx. The current Government of Australia may consider investor–State dispute

settlement on a treaty-by-treaty basis.

47 trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/may/tradoc_153408.PDF. See also the UNCTAD World

Investment Report 2015: Reforming International Investment Governance, which presents an action

menu for investment regime reform. UNCTAD, IIA Issues Note, May 2015.

48 ccsi.columbia.edu/files/2012/11/FDI-Perspectives-eBook-v2-Nov-2012.pdf.

49 Guatemala, www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jun/10/obscure-legal-system-lets-corportations-sue-

states-ttip-icsid.

or cluster bombs because contrary to international humanitarian law, thus “expropriating”

expected profits of the arms industry.

30. It is not just a question of reforming the investor–State dispute settlement system for

the future, but imperative to review and revise existing bilateral investment treaties and free

trade agreements, which were never intended to become prisons for States. If investor–State

dispute settlement and ICSID have since mutated into institutions of economic coercion,

they must be dismantled and reinvented through the Vienna Convention on the Law of

Treaties.

IV. Normative framework

31. Although bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements have been on the

international agenda for decades, their human rights impacts have been underreported.

Apparently the siren call of potential profit and the over-optimistic forecasts promising

GDP growth and significant creation of jobs have been so seductive to some governments

that human rights considerations have been neglected and State functions compromised.

32. Among the sources of law recognized by the International Court of Justice are the

general principles of law (art. 38 (1)(c) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice)

which inform both national and international legal orders. Among those fundamental

principles is good faith (bona fide), which has been incorporated into the civil codes and

Constitutions of many States, and means that the law must be coherent and cannot be used

antithetically to destroy rights. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights enshrines this

principle in article 30, which is reflected in article 5 of the two Covenants. Other relevant

general principles of law include the principles of proportionality, foreseeability, rebus sic

stantibus, clean hands, estoppel (ex injuria non oritur jus), the prohibition of abuse of

rights, entrapment and the prohibition of treaties or contracts that are contra bonos mores.

33. Most States have enshrined in their Constitution and legislation the concept of ordre

public. A government that compromises its competence to defend and protect the interests

of the persons living under its jurisdiction betrays its raison d’être and loses its democratic

legitimacy.

34. The large body of existing human rights treaties, protocols and declarations create a

constitutional framework that must be taken into account whenever a State enters into

agreements with other States and/or private-sector actors, including financial institutions

and transnational enterprises. The human rights regime, including international and regional

human rights treaties and the relevant ILO and WHO Conventions, must be treated as

superior to other agreements, including bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements. National courts and international tribunals and arbitration instances must be

subordinated to this regime.

35. Among the rights that States must ensure are the rights to life, security of person,

participation in the conduct of public affairs, homeland, movement, health, education,

employment and social security. These commitments are enshrined, inter alia, in articles 1,

2, 6, 9, 12, 17, 25, 26, 27 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and

articles 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social

and Cultural Rights.

36. The process of elaboration, negotiation and adoption of bilateral investment treaties

and free trade agreements must conform with the requirement of article 25 (a) of the

International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to ensure participation by all

stakeholders. This entails a proactive obligation on the part of Governments to disclose the

necessary information and facilitate public participation. Access to information is an

essential condition for the exercise of the right of freedom of opinion and expression under

article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The added value of

consultation and participation is building consensus which decreases the likelihood of

onerous litigations. Parliaments have a high responsibility to carefully examine bilateral

investment treaties and free trade agreements and ensure that human rights and

environmental impact assessments are carried out.

37. Trade negotiations conducted in secret (although not a matter of national security!)

and excluding key stakeholders entail prima facie violations of articles 19 and 25 of the

International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.50 As the Independent Expert explained

in his 2013 report to the Council, democratically elected representatives do not have carte

blanche from the electorate, but must consult with constituents and act according to their

wishes.51 Democracy is not exercised only once in a while, but entails a continuing dialogue

between representatives and constituents. Had it not been for Wikileaks52 publishing several

chapters of the free trade agreements under discussion, the necessary public debate could

not even have gotten started.

38. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has issued pertinent

general comments: No. 12 on the right to adequate food (art. 11), paragraphs 19 and 36

(“States parties should, in international agreements whenever relevant, ensure that the right

to adequate food is given due attention”), No. 14 on the right to the highest attainable

standard of health (art. 12), paragraph 39 (“In relation to the conclusion of other

international agreements, States parties should take steps to ensure that these instruments do

not adversely impact upon the right to health”) and paragraph 41 prohibiting embargos or

sanctions on medicines and medical equipment; No. 15, on the right to water (arts. 11 and

12), paragraphs 31 and 35–36 (“States parties should ensure that the right to water is given

due attention in international agreements and, to that end, should consider the development

of further legal instruments. With regard to the conclusion and implementation of other

international and regional agreements, States parties should take steps to ensure that these

instruments do not adversely impact upon the right to water”); No. 18 on the right to work

(art. 6) and No. 19 on the right to social security (art. 9).53

39. These commitments are further strengthened by ILO Conventions 14, 29, 77, 78, 87,

95, 98, 102, 105, 138, 169 and 182. Also of relevance are WHO Conventions and other

international treaties including the Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible

Cultural Heritage, the Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and

Natural Heritage, and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

50 Article 1 of Wilson’s 14 Points already warned against secret treaties. Article 102 of the Charter of

the United Nations requires treaties to be published. Even if bilateral investment treaties and free

trade agreements have been partly published, they possess no democratic legitimacy unless the public

can participate in negotiation and adoption. Some observers have articulated the fear that one reason

for the worldwide surveillance of private citizens may be to predict when and where democratic

movements are likely to arise so as to nip them in the bud. Hence the protection of the right to privacy

and the prohibition of surveillance without warrant are mandated by articles 14 and 17 of the

International Convenant on Civil and Political Rights.

51 A/HRC/24/38, paras. 15–24. See also Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, para. 8.

52 Personal interview with Julian Assange at the Mission of Ecuador in London on 20 March 2015

wikileaks.org/tpp/pressrelease.html, wikileaks.org/tpp-investment/press.html,

wikileaks.org/tisa/press.html and www.theguardian.com/media/2015/jun/03/wikileaks-documents-

trade-in-services-agreement.

53 tbinternet.ohchr.org/_layouts/treatybodyexternal/TBSearch.aspx?Lang=en&

TreatyID=9&DocTypeID=11.

40. Universal and regional human rights treaties, including the International Covenant

on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and

Cultural Rights, the European Convention on Human Rights, the American Convention on

Human Rights and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights necessarily take

precedence over other treaties. As the European Court of Human Rights decided in its 1989

judgment in Case of Soering v. the United Kingdom, the obligations under the European

Convention on Human Rights prevail over those under extradition treaties, mutatis

mutandis over bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements.

V. Systemic reform

41. Extraordinary problems require bold solutions. Anti-democratic investor–State

dispute settlement paroxysms can be neutralized by revision or termination of such dispute

settlement. If States can adopt extraordinary measures such as bailing out delinquent banks,

a fortiori they can adopt measures to protect the welfare of the population. Protective

actions by a State whose economy, agriculture or industry is in danger of failure because of

the sometimes unpredictable effects of bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements may be justifiable under the force majeure principle.

42. The validity of bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements should be

tested under the rules of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties. For instance, a

treaty may be void if it can be established that there was a manifest violation of the State’s

Constitution, errors relating to a fact or situation which was assumed to exist at the time the

treaty was concluded and which formed an essential basis of its consent to be bound to the

treaty (art. 48), fraudulent conduct by a negotiating party (art. 49), deliberately misleading

or spurious claims, corruption (art. 50), coercion (arts. 51–52) or conflict with a peremptory

norm of international law (art. 53). Treaties may also be terminated or their application

suspended pursuant to the doctrine of material breach (art. 60), subsequent impossibility of

performance (art. 61) or fundamental change of circumstances (art. 62). Normally, treaties

contain provisions for denunciation or withdrawal. In the absence of such provisions, such a

right may be implied by the nature of the treaty (art. 56). To the extent that bilateral

investment treaties and free trade agreements lead to violations of human rights, they

should be modified or terminated. Articles 65 et seq. lay down the procedure.

43. In a famous article in the American Journal of International Law, Verdross

elucidated which treaties can be considered contra bonos mores: “To this problem the

decisions of the courts of civilized nations give an unequivocal answer. The analysis of

these decisions shows that everywhere such treaties are regarded as being contra bonos

mores which restrict the liberty of one contracting party in an excessive or unworthy

manner or which endanger its most important rights. This and similar formulas prove that

the law of civilized states starts with the idea which demands the establishment of a

juridical order guaranteeing the rational and moral coexistence of the members. It follows

that all those norms of treaties which are incompatible with this goal of all positive law — a

goal which is implicitly presupposed — must be regarded as void.”54 Moreover, pursuant to

54 Alfred Verdross, “Forbidden Treaties in International Law”, American Journal of International Law,

Vol. 31, No. 4 (1937), pp. 571 et seq. Verdross, “Les principes du droit et la jurisprudence

internationale”, Recueil des Cours de l'Académie de Droit International, La Haye, (1935), pp. 195–

249. Robert Kolb, The International Court of Justice, Oxford, 2013, p. 81. Irmgard Marboe and

August Reinisch, “Contracts between States and foreign private law persons” in Max Planck

Encyclopedia of Public International Law, vol. II, pp. 758–766. Oxford, 2012. felj.org/sites/

default/files/elj/Energy%20Journals/Vol17_No1_1996_article_international.pdf.

the doctrine of severability, treaty provisions that are contra bonos mores can be severed

without abandoning the entire treaty.

44. Any court ruling on the legality of a particular treaty or contract would have to look

at its constitutionality. Hence the question whether, under any reasonable interpretation of a

country’s Constitution, a State can waive its ontological function to legislate in the public

interest. In most jurisdictions, the courts would answer in the negative. Moreover, there is

an ethical minimum threshold that underlies every contract or treaty. A treaty is contra

bonos mores if it prevents the universally recognized tasks of the civilized State:

(a) maintenance of public order; (b) defence of the State against external attacks; (c) care of

the bodily and spiritual welfare of persons under its jurisdiction at home; and

(d) protections of citizens abroad.55

45. Many States have in their Constitutions and legislation provisions concerning good

faith and the illegality of unjust enrichment. Moreover, it is not only the written law that

stands, but the broader principles of natural justice as already recognized in Sophocles’

Antigone, affirming the unwritten laws of humanity (αγραφος νομος), and the concept of a

higher moral law prohibiting unconscionably taking advantage of a weaker party, which

could well be considered a form of economic neo-colonialism or neo-imperialism. Many

Constitutions contain provisions concerning abuse of rights, which may find application

when a transnational enterprise interferes in a government protecting employment, health,

the environment and social order.

46. Investors might be tempted to invoke the principle pacta sunt servanda

(“agreements must be kept”, art. 26 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties), a

kind of positivism akin to the “pound of flesh” mentality described in Shakespeare’s

Merchant of Venice, where the money-lender Shylock adamantly insists on specific

performance of a contract stipulating the taking of a pound of flesh from the body of the

borrower, the bankrupt merchant Antonio. Undoubtedly Shylock had a right to

reimbursement, but demanding a pound of flesh from Antonio’s breast would have meant

an attempt on his life. Shakespeare decides the competing rights in Antonio’s favour. By

analogy, it can be said that a petroleum company that is polluting the waters and causing

major environmental damage cannot claim that its profits are guaranteed and that a State

ordinance to prevent environmental damage should be repealed. Such legalistic nonsense

borders on the criminal, and is invalidated by Article 103 of the Charter of the United

Nations.

47. International criminal law and the Nuremberg precedents56 might also be relevant in

examining bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements, to the extent that

transnational corporations and their lobbyists may have engaged in activities that

contravene penal law. It would be appropriate to test whether the concept of “conspiracy”

to commit acts that are contra bonos mores (or “joint criminal enterprise” as used by the

International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia) can be applied to the method in

which international investment agreements have been elaborated and negotiated in secrecy.

Are States or some transnational corporations guilty of “conspiracy”? Actions in pursuance

of such conspiracy could include deliberately giving false information; issuing false

55 law.wustl.edu/SBA/upperlevel/International%20Law/IntLaw-Mutharika2.pdf.

56 Nazi entrepreneurs were held criminally responsible for the consequences of some of their business

activities. www.roberthjackson.org/the-man/speeches-articles/speeches/speeches-related-to-robert-h-

jackson/the-influence-of-the-nuremberg-trial-on-international-criminal-law/. Telford Taylor, The

Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials: A Personal Memoir, New York,1992. The principle applies also in

the context of more recent human rights violations. Horacio Verbitsky, Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky

(eds.), Cuentas Pendientes. Los cómplices de la dictadura, Siglo veintiuno, 2013.

forecasts of GDP and employment growth; engaging think tanks, economists, universities

or foundations in preparing “teleological reports”; and colluding with media conglomerates

to ensure that only the “sunny” side of bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements is presented and contentious issues are suppressed or minimized. The issue of

corporate criminal responsibility for ecocide57 and other offences deserves in-depth analysis

in a future report.58

48. In reviewing the validity of the treaties, courts should also consider equitable

arguments, both intra legem equity (within the rules of international law) and praeter legem

equity (in the place of the rules of international law, applying the rules of justice or

“substance over form”). Indeed, there is an inherent power for every court including the

International Court of Justice to make decisions ex aequo et bono (based on what is fair and

right), as in all agreements there is inherent equity. Each party who enters into an

agreement tries to obtain the best possible deal, and when countries entered into bilateral

investment treaties and free trade agreements they were expecting GDP growth, job

creation and development. None imagined that the agreements would include “Trojan

Horse” provisions such as unpredictable investor–State dispute settlement commitments

and “survival clauses”, nor dreamt that arbitrators would interpret concepts like

“expropriation” as encompassing fiscal, budgetary, macroprudential, social, environmental

or health measures that could potentially reduce investors’ profits. Had this danger been

clearly explained, probably no State would have consented. Thus, to the extent that there

was inadequate disclosure of the risks, false representations and overly optimistic growth

forecasts, there was no informed consent and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties

provides grounds for modification or termination.

49. Substantively, investor–State dispute settlement tribunals cannot immunize investors

from responsibility to make amends for damage caused, and the “polluter pays” principle

cannot be trumped by a claim that paying fines is tantamount to an “expropriation”. Such a

claim would be rejected by any independent tribunal as blatantly frivolous and contrary to

ordre public.

50. Pursuant to this analysis, the denunciation of international investment agreements is

not only legitimate but also legal and their “survival clauses” must be seen as null and void

when they are intended to perpetuate a system that violates human rights.

VI. Outlook

51. “There is no fast or ready-paved road to sustainable and inclusive development; but

the past three decades have demonstrated that delivery is unlikely with a one-size-fits-all

approach to economic policy that cedes more and more space to the profitable ambitions of

global firms and market forces. Countries should ultimately rely on their own efforts to

mobilize productive resources and, especially, to raise their levels of domestic investment

(both public and private), human capital and technological know-how. However, for this

they need to have the widest possible room for manoeuvre to discover which policies work

in their particular conditions, and not be subject to a constant shrinking of their policy

space”.59

57 Polly Higgins, Eradicating Ecocide: Laws and Governance to Prevent the Destruction of our Planet,

London, 2010.

58 Harmen van der Wilt, “Corporate criminal responsibility for international crimes”, Chinese Journal of

International law, vol. 12 (Issue 1), pp. 43–77.

59 UNCTAD Trade and Development Report, 2014.

52. Pursuant to article 28 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, States shall

ensure “a social and international order in which the rights and freedoms set forth in this

declaration can be fully realized”. This is reinforced in article 2 of the International

Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and article 2 of the International Covenant on

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

53. The adoption of 10 core international human rights treaties and countless resolutions

and declarations of the General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council and the

Human Rights Council, pertinent ILO and WHO Conventions, the emergence of a system

of regional human rights courts capable of adopting binding judgments, the 1993 Vienna

Declaration and Programme of Action, the Millennium Development Goals – all these

instruments over a period of many decades prove that a customary international law of

human rights has emerged, manifesting opinio juris and international consensus on the

primacy of human rights. Accordingly, globalization and targeted investment ought to

foster an environment where human rights are fully realized through the State’s regulatory

functions. Alas, international investment agreements are usurping State functions as if the

only rights were the rights to trade and to invest.

54. In the field of intellectual property, there is consensus that it deserves protection

which must occur, however, in tandem with human rights considerations. Twenty-first

century humanity functions on the basis of thousands of years of freedom of knowledge, or

the free interchange of ideas and inventions. While there is justice in rewarding research

and patenting new pharmaceuticals and inventions, monopolies must not contribute to

greater inequality and Governments should regulate to ensure flexibility and prevent

“evergreening” practices. Access to affordable medicine is essential to protect the right to

life, and refusal to provide such affordable medicine is tantamount to the criminal offence

of denial of humanitarian aid60 or assistance to persons in danger. In other words,

knowledge cannot be appropriated for profit, privatized or commoditized, but rather shared

in international solidarity. Sharing knowledge without fee, as the European Organization

for Nuclear Research shared the World Wide Web, is in the best traditions of civilization.

55. Globalization cannot be allowed to become the grand global casino where investors

rig the system to guarantee that they always win. A democratic and equitable international

order is not possible if this “Hotel Brave New World” is allowed to ensnare States, letting

them check in but never leave. Since the siren call of foreign direct investment has proven

deceptive, Governments must move away from easy mythologies and demand empirical

evidence of job creation and reject a “race to the bottom” in human rights terms. With good

will, States can adjust international investment agreements for their benefit.

56. Transnational enterprises operate in the territory of States that are bound to the

Charter of the United Nations, akin to a world constitution, whose Purposes and Principles

are paramount for the achievement of a democratic and equitable international order.

Transnationals cannot create a new legal order beyond the Charter of the United Nations,

nor be legibus solutus or exempt from the rule of law, general principles of law and basic

codes of conduct. Transnationals do not exist in a vacuum and are bound by the

international human rights regime. Even their most cherished impact on today’s societies —

creating jobs — is only possible thanks to laws that ensure the orderly functioning of

market transactions, the clear assignment of property rights and reliance on effective courts.

They operate in the context of accountability and checks and balances that took centuries to

develop and cannot be waived. Wherever transnational corporations are registered or carry

out operations, the home and host States have the responsibility to regulate them to prevent

violations of human rights.

60 www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/misc/57jq32.htm.

57. A State that fails to ensure the human rights of the population living under its

jurisdiction is a failed State, even if it meets all its financial obligations. In order to prevent

the emergence of a dystopian situation whereby a State cannot effectively protect human

rights and transnational enterprises dictate public policy, States must reassert their

sovereignty in a manner consistent with the Purposes and Principles of the United Nations,

in particular with Articles 1 and 2 of the Charter of the United Nations. They must revise

and, when necessary, terminate agreements that conflict with human rights.

58. Bearing in mind that the essence of capitalism and investment is risk taking, States

must insist that investors accept the risk and subject themselves to national legislation in a

manner similar to the Calvo doctrine,61 which holds that jurisdiction in international

investment disputes must lie with the country in which the investment is made. This

doctrine has been adopted into the Constitutions of many Latin American States, and merits

being used as a model for international investment agreements. Transnational enterprises

cannot claim that State measures to protect the environment, health and hygiene standards

entail unpredictable risks.

59. Modification or termination of international investment agreements may be a

complex task, but much less problematic than, for example, dealing with armed conflict.

The world economy has had to adjust time and again to advance the cause of human

dignity. So it was with the prohibition of the lucrative slave trade, the abolition of slavery

and decolonization, which were replaced by other economic models. For centuries slavery

was the de facto economic model with implicit legality; colonialism was de facto the

international order. Today these practices are seen as crimes against humanity. For decades,

investor–State dispute settlement arbitrations have de facto upset the international order,

but they cannot trump the Charter of the United Nations. Just as other economic paradigms

were abandoned, eventually investor–State dispute settlement will be recognized as an

experiment gone wrong, an attempted hijacking of constitutionality resulting in the

retrogression of human rights. The consequences of not modifying or terminating bilateral

investment treaties and free trade agreements are more serious than soberly accepting the

necessity of revising them.

60. By way of conclusion, it would be appropriate to reaffirm that while free trade and

investment agreements have their raison d’être, the primary role of the State is to act in the

public interest. There are ample opportunities for corporations and investors to make

legitimate profits and enter into genuine “partnerships” with States and not into

asymmetrical relationships. The rule of thumb should be to: (a) give to corporations what

belongs to them – an environment in which to compete fairly; (b) give back to States what

is fundamentally and inalienably theirs – sovereignty and policy space; (c) give parliaments

what belongs to them – the faculty to consider all aspects of treaties without undemocratic

secrecy and fast-tracking; and (d) give to the people what is theirs: the rights to public

participation, due process and democracy.

VII. Plan of action

61. Seventy years after the entry into force of the Charter of the United Nations, it is

appropriate to reaffirm its Purposes and Principles which, pursuant to Article 103, prevail

61 Patrick Juillard, “Calvo Doctrine/Calvo Clause”, Max Planck Encyclopaedia of Public International

Law, vol. I, pp. 1086–1093, Oxford, 2012. D. R. Shea, The Calvo Clause: A Problem of inter-

American and International Law and Diplomacy, Minneapolis, 1955. C. K. Darymple, “Politics and

foreign direct investment: the multilateral investment guarantee agency and the Calvo Clause”,

Cornell International Law Review, vol. 29, pp. 161–189.

over other treaties. Bearing in mind that a democratic and equitable international order can

only be achieved gradually through the concerted action of States, national human rights

institutions, intergovernmental organizations and civil society, the Independent Expert

submits this preliminary plan of action with preventive and corrective recommendations.

62. To States:

(a) States must ensure that all trade and investment agreements — existing and

future — represent the democratic will of the populations concerned. Negotiations on

current drafts must not be secret or “fast-tracked”, but, on the contrary, must be subject to

public participation on the basis of independent human rights, health and environmental

impact assessments;

(b) States should ensure that parliaments, national human rights institutions and

ombudspersons are involved in the process of elaboration, negotiation, adoption and

application of trade and investment agreements.

(c) States must ensure that all trade and investment agreements recognize the

primacy of human rights and specify that, in case of conflict, human rights obligations

prevail. States must uphold their erga omnes obligation to implement human rights treaties

and observe ILO and WHO Conventions;

(d) States must exercise due diligence to minimize the risk of violating human

rights through the adoption and operation of bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements, and foreclose the danger of having to compensate foreign investors as a

consequence of adopting necessary fiscal, financial and debt resolution measures or policies

designed to respond to changing circumstances such as financial crises, new scientific

findings or public demand for laws of general application;

(e) States that adhere to international investment agreements must ensure that a

regulatory independent mechanism is also agreed upon, such as the office of an

ombudsperson. Provision must be made for ex ante and ex post human rights and

environmental impact assessments;

(f) States cannot compromise their obligation to ensure human rights by

accepting investor–State dispute settlement agreements that allow investors to challenge the

State’s labour law, environmental legislation or health codes;

(g) States must ensure that international investment agreements do not

undermine their ability to implement the industrial and macroeconomic policies needed for

development, which is an essential objective of United Nations “constitutional” law, and

take steps to revise promptly existing bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements

with negative effects on human rights. States should test existing bilateral investment

treaties and free trade agreements for compliance under their respective Constitutions, and

revise or terminate said agreements pursuant to the Vienna Convention on the Law of

Treaties when they conflict with human rights obligations;

(h) States should keep essential services in governmental hands so as to ensure

democratic transparency and accountability. Any privatization must be coupled with

effective human rights safeguards;

(i) All future international investment agreements should provide for the

settlement of disputes not by investor–State dispute settlement but by the national courts or

a special international investment court, explicitly bound by the recognition of the primacy

of human rights, public interest and national sovereignty;

(j) States should take measures to ensure implementation of the guiding

principles on human rights impact assessments of trade and investment agreements and

make them legally binding in the domestic legal order;

(k) States should monitor respect for the Guidelines on Business and Human

Rights by all transnational enterprises operating in their territory and make them legally

binding in the domestic legal order;

(l) States should partner with civil society actors to counteract the negative

impact of free trade agreements on the enjoyment of human rights and provide for an

enabling environment for civil society actors;

(m) States must deny effect to investor–State dispute settlement and ICSID

awards that violate human rights, practice solidarity with States seeking to modify or

terminate bilateral investment treaties, free trade agreements or investor–State dispute

settlement agreements or that deny effect to arbitral awards, and take measures vis-à-vis

investors and transnational corporations violating international human rights law;

(n) States victims of contra bonos mores investor–State dispute settlement

arbitrations should organize a concerted response, jointly refuse implementation and

convene an assembly of States parties to modify or terminate investor–State dispute

settlement agreements with immediate effect and to revise or terminate application of the

Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards when the

awards entail human rights violations;

(o) States should include in bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements specific provisions on the legal responsibility of transnational corporations and

investors to make reparation for environmental, health and other damage caused by their

activities, and strengthen domestic criminal law provisions so as to address personal

criminal liability of investors and corporation executives for environmental harm or gross

human rights violations. To this end, States should establish a monitoring mechanism to

assess investor compliance with human rights;

(p) States should invoke Article 96 of the Charter of the United Nations and

request the General Assembly to refer pertinent legal questions to the International Court of

Justice for advisory opinions.

63. To parliaments:

(a) Bearing in mind that in representative democracies parliaments are the

trustees of the will of the people, parliamentarians must consult with their constituents,

proactively inform and seek the opinion of all sectors of the population, particularly those

likely to be affected by international investment agreements. Fast-tracking treaties is

incompatible with the democratic process and results in illegitimate treaties;

(b) Parliaments must ensure that international investment agreements contain

general provisions on their periodic review and amendment, as well as provisions for

termination, withdrawal or suspension without unreasonable “survival clauses”;

(c) Parliaments must ensure that bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements advance food security, education, health, sanitation social and economic

policies and decide on domestic budgetary and fiscal matters;

(d) Parliamentarians should resist the siren call of lobbies for transnational

enterprises that make over-optimistic projections of growth and development.

Parliamentarians must demand independent economic studies and independent human

rights impact assessments;

(e) Parliamentarians should resist attempts to privatize essential governmental

services, including the provision of safe water and sanitation;

(f) Regional parliaments and parliamentary assemblies should address the

dangers to human rights of bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements, including

ways to repeal and/or modify them according to the Vienna Convention on the Law of

Treaties.

64. To transnational enterprises and investors: transnational enterprises must accept the

adoption of State measures to implement progressively the rights contained in the

International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and factor them in as a

cost of doing business. They must refrain from interfering in a State’s function to legislate

in the public interest in implementation of human rights treaty obligations.

65. To civil society, national human rights institutions, universities and religious

institutions:

(a) Civil society organizations and universities should revisit the dogmas of

market fundamentalism and test empirically the extent to which existing international

investment agreements have fostered or hindered the enjoyment of human rights;

(b) Individuals and groups should reclaim their democratic right to participate in

decision-making in the determination of governmental budgetary, fiscal, economic, trade

and social policies. They should demand the primacy of human rights over investment

privileges and vindicate the social contract, as reflected in an index of public satisfaction

composed of both material and non-material indicators;

(c) Individuals and groups should demand periodic review of the success or

otherwise of international investment agreements. When treaties conflict with human rights,

they must be revised, amended or terminated;

(d) Individuals and groups should demand transparency and accountability from

their elected officials, particularly with regard to the elaboration, negotiation, adoption and

application of trade and investment agreements;

(e) Individuals and groups should engage national courts to determine the

constitutionality of existing bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements and to

define the parameters of possible future agreements;

(f) Individuals and groups should assert their rights by invoking the jurisdiction

of regional human rights courts, and asking them to investigate and denounce violations of

the civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights resulting from the application of

international investment agreements or the implementation of investor–State dispute

settlement awards;

(g) Law schools should include ethics in their curricula and teach prospective

lawyers and arbitrators that they have a duty to serve society and uphold the letter and spirit

of the law. They cannot aid and abet any system whose foreseeable consequences are the

erosion of human rights and environmental standards. Students should see investment law

as part of a legal framework that includes human rights. Law is not a game and the goal is

not to “win” but to serve justice, aware that positivism in law must integrate human dignity.

No one should seek to profit from injustice;

(h) Religious institutions should join forces to assess the compliance of bilateral

investment treaties and free trade agreements with human rights law and standards, and

where relevant promote ways to modify or terminate those treaties that adversely impact on

human rights;

(i) National human rights institutions should advise States against entering

bilateral investment treaties or free trade agreements that do not guarantee State sovereignty

and regulatory space. National human rights institutions should advise States on how to

modify or terminate treaties that hinder the implementation of human rights.

66. To the Human Rights Council :

(a) The new Forum on Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law should

devote a session to the human rights impacts of bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements. This Forum may elaborate a plan of action to address existing problems and

recommend implementable solutions, including the phasing out of investor–State dispute

settlement and either reverting to national tribunals or replacing investor–State dispute

settlement by the creation of an independent and transparent international investment court

with permanent judges bound by a statute that prioritizes human rights and disallows one-

way jurisdiction, so that not only investors but also States have standing to sue;

(b) The Human Rights Council should systematically use its universal periodic

review procedure to inquire into the impact of bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements on the enjoyment of human rights;

(c) The Council should consider tasking OHCHR with a global online

consultation on the issue of adverse impacts of free trade and investment agreements on the

enjoyment of human rights so as to provide input to the Accountability and Remedy

Project, and allocate additional funds for this consultation;

(d) The Council should consider referring matters to the United Nations Security

Council and to United Nations specialized agencies like the Food and Agriculture

Organization of the United Nations, ILO, WHO and the United Nations Children’s Fund

and study the possibility of requesting injunctive relief to prevent the violation of civil,

cultural, economic, political and social rights.

67. To United Nations agencies and subsidiary organs :

(a) UNCTAD should consider convening a conference to explore the

possibilities of revising or terminating existing bilateral investment treaties and free trade

agreements that contain provisions that have interfered with the State’s duty to legislate

human rights, implement economic policies and regulate in the public interest. Such a

conference should advance the UNCTAD “action menu” and “road map” for reform;

(b) UNCTAD and OHCHR should provide advisory services and technical

assistance how to reverse the negative human rights impacts of bilateral investment treaties

and free trade agreements and how to compensate victims;

(c) All United Nations agencies and subsidiary organs should put international

investment agreements on their agenda and offer advisory services and technical assistance to

States considering such agreements to ensure the protection of all human rights, including the

rights to food, health, minimum wage, improved labour standards, gender equality and the

rights of the child. In relevant ICSID and investor–State dispute settlement arbitrations they

should submit amicus curiae briefs. They should use their competence under Article 96 (2) of

the Charter of the United Nations to request pertinent advisory opinions from the

International Court of Justice;

(d) WTO should integrate human rights into its mission statement and ensure

that its dispute settlement mechanism fosters human rights;

(e) As the core legal body of the United Nations system in the field of

international trade law, UNCITRAL 62

should mainstream human rights into its activities, in

particular strengthen its transparency rules and ensuring that arbitrations systematically take

obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the

International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights into account and refrain

62 www.uncitral.org/, www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/texts/arbitration/rules-on-transparency/Rules-on-

Transparency-E.pdf, www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/texts/arbitration/

rules-on-transparency/Rules-on-Transparency-E.pdf.

from undermining human rights, national policy space and environmental protection

measures. Arbitrations must migrate from the private law paradigm to a public law

framework which promotes general interests.

VIII. Postscript

68. The Independent Expert is grateful that enhanced recognition of the mandate is

leading to increased input from Governments, national human rights institutions, civil

society and academia. He welcomes contact with stakeholders from all related fields and

looks forward to engaging with them in the upcoming reporting year.

69. By way of conclusion, the Independent Expert would like to reiterate his expression

of appreciation to the very hard-working and competent OHCHR staff, and request the

General Assembly to allocate greater resources to OHCHR.

Annex

[English only]

Selected Activities

Participation at side-events during the 27th, 28th and 29th sessions of the HR Council and

side-events during UPR sessions.

• 9 October 2014: Keynote speaker at the Erskine Childers lecture on the right to

peace, London.

• 23–24 October: Participation in two panels of the International Law Association, on

international governance and geo-engineering, and on new Special Procedures

mandates, New York.

• 6–9 December: Conference on the humanitarian impact of nuclear weapons, Vienna.

• 13 December: “Parliaments and the United Nations”, United Nations Association,

Bern.

• 27 January 2015: bilateral consultation with trade experts at South Centre, Geneva.

• 10 February: Panel discussion, “Combating Violence and Discrimination against

Women, Carter Center, Atlanta.

• 11–12 February: Conference on Democracy and democratic elections, including

bilateral meeting with President Carter, Atlanta.

• 19 March: Symposium on Unilateral Sanctions, Legal Policy and Business

Challenges, London Centre of International Law Practice, London.

• 20–21 April: Consultation convened by the Independent Expert on human rights and

international solidarity, Geneva

• 20–24 April: Participation in the open-ended inter-governmental working group on

the right to peace.

• 27 April: Video message to Womenʼs International League for Peace and Freedom

(WILPF)’s Conference on Peace, The Hague.

• 28 April: Bilateral consultations with trade experts at IPU, Geneva.

• 4 May: Bilateral consultations with trade experts at ILO and WHO

• 5 May: Expert consultation on free trade and investment agreements, Geneva (see

Appendix 2).

• 19 May: Conference on unilateral economic sanctions, Institute of Democracy and

Cooperation, Paris.

• 8–12 June: Annual meeting of Special Procedures mandate holders, Geneva.

Questionnaire of the Independent Expert on the promotion

of a democratic and equitable international order

(1) In your views, do free trade and investment agreements promote or obstruct

an international order that is more democratic and equitable? Can you provide

positive or negative examples of the effects of free trade and investment agreements

on human rights, including labour standards, prohibition of child labour, minimum

wage levels, vacation and pension entitlements, gender equality etc.?

(2) How do States ensure that the genuine will of the people is respected when

free trade and investment agreements are elaborated, negotiated, ratified and

implemented?

(3) How do States ensure that the distribution of benefits and wealth derived

from free trade and investment agreements is proportional to all its parties, as well as

third-parties that may also be impacted? In particular what fiscal measures are in

place to ensure that profits are legitimately taxed and to prevent the use of tax

havens or tax avoidance schemes.

(4) To what extent can affected groups be identified and consulted in order to

mitigate potential adverse effects of these agreements on their human rights? To

what extent are all stakeholders consulted, including labour unions, syndicates,

environmental protection organizations, health professionals, ombudsmen?

(5) How can Parliaments ensure transparency and accountability in the process

of elaboration, negotiation, ratification and implementation of trade and investment

agreements to ensure that human rights are respected, protected and fulfilled?

(6) What recommendations could be provided as guiding principles to strengthen

disclosure of information to enable meaningful participation in the decision-making

process in relation to these agreements?

(7) Have opinion polling and referenda been used before the adoption of past

trade and investment agreements, and how could these mechanisms be effectively

employed in current negotiations?

(8) To the extent that globalization impacts all States, whether parties of free

trade and investment agreements or not, how can the democratic participation of all

States in global decision-making processes be advanced?

(9) To what extent do free trade agreements or investment agreements

compromise the sovereignty of States over domestic policy decisions on the

protection of public health, the environment, promotion of local industries and

agriculture? Are there human rights clauses or provision for exceptions to ensure the

respect of human rights?

(10) What jurisdiction is competent to judge alleged breaches of a free trade or

investment agreement? What are the appeal possibilities? What kind of sanctions

can be imposed?

(11) In States parties to free trade and investment agreements, what recourses and

remedies are available to States, corporations, groups and individuals, including

indigenous peoples, in case human rights are violated?

Concept Note of the Consultation on the impact of free trade

and investment agreements on an equitable and democratic

international order, 5 May 2015

1. Background

1. The mandate of the Independent Expert was created by Human Rights Council

resolution 18/6 in September 2011. Subsequent resolutions 21/9, 25/15 and 27/9 have

complemented the mandate’s terms of reference. The first, and current, mandate holder,

Mr. Alfred de Zayas, was appointed effective 1 May 2012. To date, the Independent Expert

has presented three substantive reports to the Human Rights Council and three reports to

the General Assembly on various issues falling within his mandate including on fostering

full, equitable and effective participation in conduct of public affairs; the adverse impacts

of military expenditures on a democratic international order; the right of self-determination,

as well as initiatives and mechanisms promoting the right to peace, international

cooperation, and enhanced participation of States and civil society in global decision-

making.

2. In resolution A/HRC/RES/25/15, the Human Rights Council calls upon Members

states “to fulfil their commitment … to maximize the benefits of globalization through,

inter alia, the strengthening and enhancement of international cooperation to increase

equality of opportunities for trade, economic growth and sustainable development…”,

reiterating “… that only through broad and sustained efforts to create a shared future based

upon our common humanity and all its diversity can globalization be made fully inclusive

and equitable.”

3. In recent years, globalization has fostered trade as well as cultural and human

exchange, which ultimately has benefitted economic growth. Globalization has provided

opportunities for improved standards of living and poverty reduction, but it has also caused

unemployment in some sectors, dismantled local industries and triggered population

movements and migration. Moreover, the increasing influence of trade in global, regional

and bilateral relations between States has in many instances led to growing inequalities both

between States and within States. While globalization has allowed for the empowerment of

individuals and communities in various domains, the increased rapidity of trade

liberalization today, especially in terms of financial flows and corporations’ influential

capacity, renders it pertinent to examine the continuing effects of trade and investment

agreements on a democratic and equitable international order.

4. Accordingly, the Independent Expert intends to examine the impact of free trade and

investment agreements on a democratic and equitable international order in his upcoming

reports to the Human Rights Council and to the General Assembly.

5. As part of the process of elaborating these reports, the Independent Expert is

convening a one-day expert consultation on 5 May 2015 in Geneva, Switzerland.

2. Objectives

6. The consultation intends to:

(i) Seek the views of experts on the impact of free trade and investment

agreements on the protection and promotion of human rights and the promotion of a

democratic and equitable international order;

(ii) Explore ways in which globalization in trade-related areas could advance,

rather than hinder, the realization of an international order that is more democratic and

more equitable;

(iii) Gather suggestions for concrete and pragmatic recommendations for his

reports to the Human Rights Council and General Assembly.

3. Expected outcome

7. The expected outcome of this meeting is to provide inputs and suggestions to inform

the Independent Expert’s 2015 reports to the Human Rights Council and the General

Assembly. Participants are encouraged to put forward possible recommendations for

inclusion in these reports. Written submission before or after the consultation are welcome.

4. Thematic focus

8. The meeting is expected to address the following issues:

Public participation

9. The level of proactive information provided by governments and transnational

enterprises and financiers in the process of elaboration, negotiation and adoption of free

trade and investment agreements and the opportunity of the public to meaningfully

participate in the process are often not compliant with article 25 of the ICCPR. The rapid

adoption of these agreements in parliaments with little consultation or participation, often

influenced by lobbyists, prevents the electorate from voting on issues that affect them

directly.

10. For this reason it is imperative to examine the role of Parliaments in monitoring the

elaboration, negotiation and adoption of these agreements, their responsibility to legislate

for the public interest notwithstanding FTAs, their power of modification and/or

termination of FTA agreements that conflict with the proper exercise of State competences

in protecting the environment, health and labour standards. The role of Parliaments in

regulating the activities of transnational enterprises, especially in areas of environmental

protection and health standards will also be discussed.

5. Impact on human rights

11. Existing and proposed free trade and investment agreements have far-reaching

effects on human rights. International agreements impact the rights to employment and

labour, the right to health, the right to food, and the right to a safe, clean, healthy and

sustainable environment. The normative framework to be examined will include the United

Nations Charter, the two human rights covenants, the conventions on the rights of the child,

the convention on migrant workers, the ILO Conventions on labour standards, WHO

Conventions including the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, and soft law

resolutions and declarations including the 1998 ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles

and Rights at Work, the Guidelines on Business and Human Rights and the Declaration on

the Right to Development.

12. A review of human rights concerns that have arisen in the past on the basis of the

experience with free trade and investment agreements, especially concerning States’

obligation to adopt measures to progressively advance economic, social and cultural rights

will notably be discussed. The “chilling effect” of the threat of costly Investor State Dispute

Settlements (ISDS) arbitrations, which may deter States in adopting social legislation, will

also be explored. The question arises whether transnational corporations can ever be

allowed to hinder the competence of States to legislate in the public interest, and whether

States can waive their competences without negating the ontological nature of the sovereign

State as understood in the UN Charter.

13. Participants will examine the pertinence of human rights impact assessments in the

process of elaboration of free trade and investment agreements, as well as the usefulness of

subsequent or follow-up human rights impact assessment.

6. Reviewing the primacy of human rights treaty obligations over Free Trade

and Investment Agreements

14. During the consultation, participants will be able to express their views on the

primacy of the UN Charter and in particular its human rights provisions over other treaties

(Cf. Art. 103 of the UN Charter). The discussion should also address experiences with the

use of exception clauses or clauses that allow States to legislate in the public interest

without fearing financial consequences before ISDS Tribunals. To the extent that free trade

and investment agreements hinder the State’s function of legislating in the public interest

and result in violations of human rights treaties including ICCPR, ICESCR, ILO and WHO

Conventions, they may be considered contra bonos mores and as such null and void

pursuant to article 53 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (CVLT). Customary

international law on these issues should be revisited, including general principles of law

(Art. 38 ICJ statute) including good faith (Art. 26 Vienna Convention on the Law of

Treaties) and the concept of abuse of rights contained in the legislation of many countries.

15. A review of the establishment of ISDS Tribunals and issues of conflict of interests

and a review of the jurisprudence of ISDS arbitrations, including the possibilities of

challenging arbitration awards will be discussed. In particular, the possibility and

modalities of refusing implementation of arbitration awards and the consequence of such

refusal will be explored, as well as the experience made by States in suing transnational

corporations for environmental damage (the polluter pays principles) and endangering

public health. In this context participants should consider whether the establishment of

parallel systems of dispute settlement are compatible with the State’s obligation to ensure

that suits at law are examined by independent tribunals. Separate and unaccountable dispute

settlement mechanisms seem to be contrary to the rule of law, in particular to article 14(1)

ICCPR.

7. Pragmatic recommendations to make globalization work for human rights

16. Global challenges include privatization, the role of the World Bank and its

International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes, the WTO and the IMF, foreign

debt management, default, unilateral sanctions, extraterritorial application of laws, etc.

17. Participants will discuss general issues about the impact of globalisation on human

rights, including the ideas of taxation of transnational enterprises and phasing-out of tax

havens and formulate recommendations thereon.

18. Among possible recommendations are the modification or termination of free trade

and investment agreements that have led to violations of human rights. Participants

consider the grounds for denunciation, invalidity, suspension, modification or termination

of treaties laid down in the VCLT, including error (art. 48), fraud (art. 49), corruption

(art. 50), coercion (arts. 51 and 52), conflict with peremptory norms (art. 53), implied right

of denunciation or withdrawal (art. 56), breach (art. 60), supervening impossibility of

performance (art. 61), fundamental change of circumstances (art. 62), emergence of a new

jus cogens norm (art. 64), and the procedure to follow (arts. 65 et seq.)

19. Participants may also consider the feasibility for the General Assembly or some

other body such as the ILO or WHO to request advisory opinions from the International

Court of Justice on the primacy of human rights over FTAs and on available mechanisms to

provide redress to victims.

Guiding Principles on business and human rights: Implementing

the United Nations ‘Protect, Respect and Remedy’ Framework – excerpts

20. The Human Rights Council endorsed the Guiding Principles in its resolution 17/4 of

16 June 2011.

Guiding principle 9

States should maintain adequate domestic policy space to meet their human rights

obligations when pursuing business-related policy objectives with other States or business

enterprises, for instance through investment treaties or contracts.

Commentary

Economic agreements concluded by States, either with other States or with business

enterprises — such as bilateral investment treaties, free trade agreements or contracts for

investment projects — create economic opportunities for States. But they can also affect the

domestic policy space of Governments. For example, the terms of international investment

agreements may constrain States from fully implementing new human rights legislation, or

put them at risk of binding international arbitration if they do so. Therefore, States should

ensure that they retain adequate policy and regulatory ability to protect human rights under

the terms of such agreements, while providing the necessary investor protection.

Guiding principle 25

As part of their duty to protect against business-related human rights abuse, States must

take appropriate steps to ensure, through judicial, administrative, legislative or other

appropriate means, that when such abuses occur within their territory and/or jurisdiction

those affected have access to effective remedy.

Report of the Working Group on the issue of human rights and

transnational corporations and other business enterprises,

A/HRC/29/28 excerpts

Transparency in investment arbitration

21. A significant opportunity for increasing transparency in the area of investor-State

arbitration has arisen from work of the Working Group on Arbitration and Conciliation of

the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL). The

UNCITRAL Working Group started working on transparency in 2010, with a mandate that

stressed the importance of ensuring transparency in investor-State dispute settlements

(A/6317, para. 314). In a written submission in support of that mandate, a Member State

observed that the lack of transparency in investor-State arbitration was contrary to the

fundamental principles of good governance and human rights upon which the United

Nations is founded (see A/CN.9/662, para. 20). That work has culminated in two major

texts: (a) the rules on transparency in treaty-based investor-State arbitration, which came

into effect on 1 April 2014; and (b) a convention on transparency63 (the United Nations

Convention on Transparency), which was finalized by the Commission in July 2014 and

opened for signature on 17 March 2015. The Working Group on the issue of human rights

and transnational corporations and other business enterprises welcomes these new

transparency rules.

22. Both the Guiding Principles and the UNCITRAL work on transparency back

procedural and legal transparency and take a practical approach to achieving that aim. The

new UNCITRAL rules on transparency seek to address a regular concern with investor-

State dispute settlement cases – namely that their typically confidential and non-

63 A/CN.9/812 and www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/texts/arbitration/transparency-convention/

Transparency-Convention-e.pdf. The Working Group chairperson was invited to speak at the March

2015 signing ceremony.

participatory nature does not allow for involvement by affected stakeholders, or for an

adequate balance between the need for States to ensure that they retain adequate policy and

regulatory ability to protect human rights and provide investor protection, as clarified in

Guiding Principle 9. With the new UNCITRAL rules and the United Nations Convention

on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor-State Arbitration, States have a practical means

to promote good governance and respect for human rights with a broader policy framework

that is aligned with the Guiding Principles.64

23. These rules, when they apply, provide a transparent procedural regime under which

investment treaty arbitrations are conducted. They can be used in investor-State arbitrations

initiated under UNCITRAL arbitration rules, as well as under other institutional arbitration

rules or in ad hoc proceedings. States can now incorporate them into investment treaties

concluded on or after 1 April 2014, but for the rules to apply to disputes arising under the

more than 3,000 investment treaties concluded before that date, the States parties to a

treaty, or disputing parties in an investor-State arbitration, would need to agree to apply the

rules under that treaty or to that dispute. This highlights the importance of the Convention

on Transparency, which provides an efficient, multilateral mechanism by which States can

agree, subject to relevant reservations, to apply the rules to all arbitrations arising under

their investment treaties concluded before 1 April 2014. The Working Group welcomes the

rules and considers that an obvious step for States to remedy incoherence between current

modes of investment with norms for good governance and human rights considerations,

including those set out in the Guiding Principles, would be to sign and ratify the

Convention.

24. The Working Group is pleased to have had the opportunity to engage with

UNCITRAL, including at its forty-seventh session in July 2014, and to note that in the

report of that session the Commission agreed that the UNCITRAL secretariat should

monitor developments in the area of business and human rights, in cooperation with

relevant bodies within the United Nations and beyond and inform the Commission about

developments of relevance to UNCITRAL work (see A/69/17, para. 204).

Guiding principles on human rights impact assessments of trade

and investment agreements, A/HRC/19/59/Add.5 excerpts

25. All States should prepare human rights impact assessments prior to the conclusion of

trade and investment agreements.

26. States must ensure that the conclusion of any trade or investment agreement does not

impose obligations inconsistent with their pre-existing international treaty obligations,

including those to respect, protect and fulfil human rights.

27. Human rights impact assessments of trade and investment agreements should be

prepared prior to the conclusion of the agreements and in time to influence the outcomes of

the negotiations and, if necessary, should be completed by ex post impact assessments.

Based on the results of the human rights impact assessment, a range of responses exist

where an incompatibility is found, including but not limited to the following:

(a) Termination of the agreement;

(b) Amendment of the agreement;

64 http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/investment-and-human-rights/portfolio-items/transparency-in-investment-treaty-

arbitration-and-the-un-guiding-principles-on-business-and-human-rights-the-new-uncitral-rules-and-

convention-on-transparency/.

(c) Insertion of safeguards in the agreement;

(d) Provision of compensation by third-State parties;

(e) Adoption of mitigation measures.

28. Each State should define how to prepare human rights impact assessments of trade

and investment agreements it intends to conclude or has entered into. The procedure,

however, should be guided by a human rights-based approach, and its credibility and

effectiveness depend on the fulfilment of the following minimum conditions:

(a) Independence;

(b) Transparency;

(c) Inclusive participation;

(d) Expertise and funding; and

(e) Status.

29. While each State may decide on the methodology by which human rights impact

assessments of trade and investment agreements will be prepared, a number of elements

should be considered:

(a) Making explicit reference to the normative content of human rights

obligations;

(b) Incorporating human rights indicators into the assessment; and

(c) Ensuring that decisions on trade-offs are subject to adequate consultation

(through a participatory, inclusive and transparent process), comport with the principles of

equality and non-discrimination, and do not result in retrogression.

30. States should use human rights impact assessments, which aid in identifying both

the positive and negative impacts on human rights of the trade or investment agreement, to

ensure that the agreement contributes to the overall protection of human rights.

31. To ensure that the process of preparing a human rights impact assessment of a trade

or investment agreement is manageable, the task should be broken down into a number of

key steps that ensure both that the full range of human rights impacts will be considered,

and that the assessment will be detailed enough on the impacts that seem to matter the

most:

(a) Screening;

(b) Scoping;

(c) Evidence gathering;

(d) Analysis;

(e) Conclusions and recommendations; and

(f) Evaluation mechanism.

International Labour Organisation Declaration on Fundamental

Principles and Rights at Work and its Follow-Up, adopted by

the International Labour Conference at its eighty-sixth session,

Geneva, 18 June 1998 (Annex revised 15 June 2010) excerpts

“2. Declares that all Members, even if they have not ratified the Conventions in

question, have an obligation arising from the very fact of membership in the Organization

to respect, to promote and to realize, in good faith and in accordance with the Constitution,

the principles concerning the fundamental rights which are the subject of those

Conventions, namely:

(a) freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective

bargaining;

(b) the elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labour;

(c) the effective abolition of child labour; and

(d) the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation.”

Declaration of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, 17 June 2014 excerpts

In its Declaration, the 134 members of the Group of 77 expressed their concern

about the negative impact of certain trade agreements on developing countries:

64. We note with great concern that non-communicable diseases have become an

epidemic of significant proportions, undermining the sustainable development of member

States. In that sense, we acknowledge the effectiveness of tobacco control measures for the

improvement of health. We reaffirm the right of member States to protect public health and,

in particular, to ensure universal access to medicines and medical diagnostic technologies,

if necessary, including through the full use of the flexibilities in the Doha Declaration on

the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS

Agreement) and Public Health.

169. We believe that trade rules, in WTO or in bilateral and regional trade

agreements, should enable developing countries to have sufficient policy space so that they

can make use of policy instruments and measures that are required for their economic and

social development. We reiterate our call for the effective strengthening of the special and

differential treatment and less than full reciprocity principles and provisions in WTO so as

to broaden the policy space of developing countries and enable them to benefit more from

the multilateral trading system. We also call for bilateral trade and investment agreements

involving developed and developing countries to have sufficient special and differential

treatment for developing countries to enable them to retain adequate policy space for social

and economic development.

UNCTAD Database of Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) in 201465

Case title

Year the case

was initiated

Respondent

State

Home State of

investor (claimant) Legal Instrument

Arbitration

Rules

Outcome/Status

of proceedings

A11Y Ltd v. Czech Republic 2014 Czech

Republic

United Kingdom Czech Republic-UK BIT UNCITRAL Pending

Albaniabeg Ambient Sh.p.k,

M. Angelo Novelli and

Costruzioni S.r.l. v. Republic

of Albania (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/26)

2014 Albania Italy Energy Charter Treaty ICSID Pending

Alpiq AG v. Romania (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/28)

2014 Romania Switzerland Switzerland-Romania

BIT; Energy Charter

Treaty

ICSID Pending

Anglia Auto Accessories, Ivan

Peter Busta and Jan Peter

Busta v. Czech Republic

2014 Czech

Republic

United Kingdom Czech Republic-UK BIT SCC Pending

Anglo American PLC v.

Bolivarian Republic of

Venezuela (ICSID Case

No. ARB(AF)/14/1)

2014 Venezuela,

Bolivarian

Republic of

United Kingdom United Kingdom-

Venezuela BIT

ICSID AF Pending

Ansung Housing Co., Ltd. v.

Peopleʼs Republic of China

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/25)

2014 China Korea,

Republic of

China-Republic of Korea

BIT (2007)

ICSID Pending

Ayoub-Farid Saab and Fadi

Saab v. Cyprus

2014 Cyprus Lebanon Cyprus-Lebanon BIT ICC Pending

Bear Creek Mining

Corporation v. Republic of

Peru (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/21)

2014 Peru Canada Canada-Peru FTA ICSID Pending

Beijing Urban Construction

Group Co. Ltd. v. Republic of

Yemen (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/30)

2014 Yemen China China-Yemen BIT ICSID Pending

Blusun S.A., Jean-Pierre

Lecorcier and Michael Stein v.

Italian Republic (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/3)

2014 Italy Belgium; France;

Germany

Energy Charter Treaty ICSID Pending

Casinos Austria International

GmbH and Casinos Austria

Aktiengesellschaft v.

Argentine Republic (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/32)

2014 Argentina Austria Argentina-Austria BIT ICSID Pending

CEAC Holdings Limited v.

Montenegro (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/8)

2014 Montenegro Cyprus Cyprus-Serbia and

Montenegro BIT

ICSID Pending

Cem Uzan v. Republic of

Turkey

2014 Turkey Data not available Energy Charter Treaty SCC Pending

65 http://unctad.org/en/Pages/DIAE/ISDS.aspx

Case title

Year the case

was initiated

Respondent

State

Home State of

investor (claimant) Legal Instrument

Arbitration

Rules

Outcome/Status

of proceedings

City-State N.V., Praktyka

Asset Management Company

LLC, Crystal-Invest LLC and

Prodiz LLC v. Ukraine (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/9)

2014 Ukraine Netherlands Netherlands-Ukraine

BIT

ICSID Pending

Corona Materials, LLC v.

Dominican Republic (ICSID

Case No. ARB(AF)/14/3)

2014 Dominican

Republic

United States of

America

CAFTA ICSID AF Pending

Cyprus Popular Bank Public

Co. Ltd. v. Hellenic Republic

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/16)

2014 Greece Cyprus Cyprus-Greece BIT ICSID Pending

David Aven, Samuel Aven,

Carolyn Park, Eric Park,

Jeffrey Shioleno, Giacomo

Buscemi, David Janney and

Roger Raguso v. Costa Rica

2014 Costa Rica United States of

America

CAFTA UNCITRAL Pending

Elektrogospodarstvo Slovenije

- razvoj ininzeniring d.o.o. v.

Bosnia and Herzegovina

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/13)

2014 Bosnia and

Herzegovina

Slovenia Energy Charter Treaty;

Bosnia Herzegovina-

Slovenia BIT

ICSID Pending

EuroGas Inc. and Belmont

Resources Inc. v. Slovak

Republic (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/14)

2014 Slovakia Canada; United

States of America

Slovakia/Czechoslovakia

-US BIT; Canada-

Slovakia BIT

ICSID Pending

Highbury International AVV,

Compañía Minera de Bajo

Caroní AVV, and Ramstein

Trading Inc. v. Bolivarian

Republic of Venezuela (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/10)

2014 Venezuela,

Bolivarian

Republic of

Netherlands Netherlands-Venezuela

BIT

ICSID Pending

IBT Group LLC, Constructor,

Consulting and Engineering

(Panamá) SA and International

Trade and Business and Trade,

LLC v. Republic of Panama

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/33)

2014 Panama United States of

America

Panama-US BIT ICSID Pending

Infinito Gold Ltd. v. Republic

of Costa Rica (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/5)

2014 Costa Rica Canada Canada-Costa Rica BIT ICSID Pending

InfraRed Environmental

Infrastructure GP Limited and

others v. Kingdom of Spain

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/12)

2014 Spain United Kingdom Energy Charter Treaty ICSID Pending

Ioan Micula, Viorel Micula

and others v. Romania (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/29)

2014 Romania Sweden Romania-Sweden BIT ICSID Pending

JML Heirs LLC and J.M.

Longyear LLC v. Canada

2014 Canada United States

of America

NAFTA Data not

available

Pending

Krederi Ltd. v. Ukraine

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/17)

2014 Ukraine United Kingdom Ukraine-UK BIT ICSID Pending

Case title

Year the case

was initiated

Respondent

State

Home State of

investor (claimant) Legal Instrument

Arbitration

Rules

Outcome/Status

of proceedings

Louis Dreyfus Armateurs v.

India

2014 India France France-India BIT UNCITRAL Pending

Masdar Solar & Wind

Cooperatief U.A. v. Kingdom

of Spain (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/1)

2014 Spain Netherlands Energy Charter Treaty ICSID Pending

Michael Dagher v. Republic of

the Sudan (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/2)

2014 Sudan Jordan; Lebanon Jordan-Sudan BIT;

Lebanon-Sudan BIT

ICSID Pending

NextEra Energy Global

Holdings B.V. and NextEra

Energy Spain Holdings B.V. v.

Kingdom of Spain (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/11)

2014 Spain Netherlands Energy Charter Treaty ICSID Pending

Nusa Tenggara Partnership

B.V. and PT Newmont Nusa

Tenggara v. Republic of

Indonesia (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/15)

2014 Indonesia Netherlands Indonesia-Netherlands

BIT

ICSID Discontinued

(for unknown

reasons)

Oded Besserglik v. Republic of

Mozambique (ICSID Case

No. ARB(AF)14/2)

2014 Mozambique South Africa Mozambique - South

Africa BIT

ICSID AF Pending

Red Eléctrica Internacional

SAU v. Bolivia

2014 Bolivia,

Plurinational

State of

Spain Spain-Bolivia BIT UNCITRAL Settled

RENERGY S.à r.l. v.

Kingdom of Spain (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/18)

2014 Spain Data not available Energy Charter Treaty ICSID Pending

RWE Innogy GmbH and RWE

Innogy Aersa S.A.U. v.

Kingdom of Spain (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/34)

2014 Spain Germany Energy Charter Treaty ICSID Pending

Sodexo Pass International SAS

v. Hungary (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/20)

2014 Hungary France France-Hungary BIT ICSID Pending

Tarique Bashir and SA

Interpétrol Burundi v.

Republic of Burundi (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/31)

2014 Burundi Belgium Belgium/Luxembourg-

Burundi BIT

ICSID Pending

Unión Fenosa Gas, S.A. v.

Arab Republic of Egypt

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/4)

2014 Egypt Spain Egypt-Spain BIT ICSID Pending

United Utilities (Tallinn) B.V.

and Aktsiaselts Tallinna Vesi

v. Republic of Estonia (ICSID

Case No. ARB/14/24)

2014 Estonia Netherlands Estonia-Netherlands BIT ICSID Pending

VICAT v. Republic of Senegal

(ICSID Case No. ARB/14/19)

2014 Senegal France France-Senegal BIT ICSID Pending

Vodafone International

Holdings BV v. India

2014 India Netherlands India-Netherlands BIT UNCITRAL Pending

Case title

Year the case

was initiated

Respondent

State

Home State of

investor (claimant) Legal Instrument

Arbitration

Rules

Outcome/Status

of proceedings

Zelena N.V. and Energo-

Zelena d.o.o Inđija v. Republic

of Serbia (ICSID Case

No. ARB/14/27)

2014 Serbia Belgium Belgium/Luxembourg-

Serbia BIT

ICSID Pending

UNCTAD Investment Policy Framework for Sustainable Development excerpt66

Core Principles for investment policymaking for sustainable development

Area Core Principles

1 Investment for sustainable development

• The overarching objective of investment policymaking is to promote investment for inclusive growth and sustainable development.

2 Policy coherence • Investment policies should be grounded in a country’s overall development strategy. All policies that impact on investment should be coherent and synergetic at both the national and international level.

3 Public governance and institutions

• Investment policies should be developed involving all stakeholders, and embedded in an institutional framework based on the rule of law that adheres to high standards of public governance and ensures predictable, efficient and transparent procedures for investors.

4 Dynamic policymaking

• Investment policies should be regularly reviewed for effectiveness and relevance and adapted to changing development dynamics.

5 Balanced rights and obligations

• Investment policies should be balanced in setting out rights and obligations of States and investors in the interest of development for all.

6 Right to regulate • Each country has the sovereign right to establish entry and operational conditions for foreign investment, subject to international commitments, in the interest of the public good and to minimize potential negative effects.

7 Openness to investment

• In line with each country’s development strategy, investment policy should establish open, stable and predictable entry conditions for investment.

8 Investment protection and treatment

• Investment policies should provide adequate protection to established investors. The treatment of established investors should be non-discriminatory in nature.

9 Investment promotion and facilitation

• Policies for investment promotion and facilitation should be aligned with sustainable development goals and designed to minimize the risk of harmful competition for investment.

66 http://unctad.org/en/Pages/DIAE/International%20Investment%20Agreements%20(IIA)/IIA-

IPFSD.aspx

Area Core Principles

10 Corporate governance and responsibility

• Investment policies should promote and facilitate the adoption of and compliance with best international practices of corporate social responsibility and good corporate governance.

11 International cooperation

• The international community should cooperate to address shared investment-for-development policy challenges, particularly in least developed countries. Collective efforts should also be made to avoid investment protectionism.

UNCATD IIA Issues Note No. 2, Investor-State Dispute Settlement: Review of

Developments in 2014, May 201567

Known ISDS cases, annual and cumulative (19872014)

67 http://investmentpolicyhub.unctad.org/Upload/Documents/UNCTAD_WEB

_DIAE_PCB_2015_%202%20IIA%20ISSUES%20NOTESMAY%20evening.pdf

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

0

10

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30

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C u

m u

la tiv

e n

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b e r o

f c a s e

s A

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u a l

n u

m b

e r

o f

c a s

e s

ICSID Non-ICSID All cases cumulative

Most frequent respondent States (total as of end 2014)

Most frequent home States (total as of end 2014)

UNCTAD Expert Meeting on the Transformation of the International

Investment Agreement Regime: The Path Ahead,

2527 February 2015 excerpts68

Item 3 Transformation of the international investment agreement regime

4. Pursuant to the terms of reference agreed by the Extended Bureau of the Trade

and Development Board in September 2014, the experts will discuss the path ahead for the

international investment agreement (IIA) regime. Challenges arising from the negotiation of

68 TD/B/C.II/EM.4/1 available at: http://unctad.org/en/Pages/MeetingDetails.aspx?meetingid=643

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140

Austria

Belgium

Turkey

Switzerland

Spain

Italy

Canada

France

Germany

United Kingdom

Netherlands

United States

Number of cases

IIAs and their implementation suggest that the time has come to revisit the IIA regime with

a view to transforming it. Such challenges include the move towards megaregional

agreements and the increasing number of investor–State dispute settlement (ISDS) cases.

5. Member States and IIA stakeholders at the 2014 IIA Conference, held in

connection with the World Investment Forum in Geneva in October, called upon UNCTAD

to develop a road map for the reform of the IIA regime and sketched the contours of such

reform.

6. A number of developments characterize the current IIA regime and set the

background against which such reform would be undertaken.

7. First, the balance is gradually shifting from bilateral treaty making to regional

treaty making, including through megaregional agreements, such as the Regional

Comprehensive Economic Partnership, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or the Transatlantic

Trade and Investment Partnership. These agreements, also known as “megaregionals”,

could have systemic implications for the IIA regime: they could either contribute to the

consolidation of the existing treaty landscape or create further inconsistencies through

overlap with existing IIAs, including those at the plurilateral level (World Investment

Report 2014).

8. Second, the second-highest number of treaty-based ISDS cases were brought

against host countries in 2014. Host countries — both developed and developing — have

learned that ISDS claims can be used by foreign investors in unanticipated ways, as a

number of recent cases have challenged measures adopted in the public interest (World

Investment Report 2014). This has sparked growing interest in reform of the investment

dispute settlement system.

9. Third, an increasing number of countries are concluding IIAs with novel

provisions aimed at rebalancing the rights and obligations between States and investors, as

well as ensuring coherence between IIAs and other public policy objectives, in response to

the recognition that inclusive growth and sustainable development need to be placed at the

core of international investment policymaking (2013 and 2014 editions of the World

Investment Report).

UNCTAD Trade and Development Report 2014 excerpts (pp. 46-48)

In an increasingly globalizing world, no less than at the domestic level, market

activity also requires a framework of rules, restraints and norms. And, no different from the

domestic level, the weakening and strengthening of that framework is a persistent feature.

However, there are two important differences. The first is that the international institutions

designed to support that framework depend principally on negotiations among States with

regard to their operation. Essentially these States must decide on whether and how much of

their own policy space they are willing to trade for the advantages of having international

rules, disciplines and support. Inevitably, in a world of unequal States, the space required to

pursue their own national economic and social development aspirations varies, as does the

likely impact of an individual country’s policy decisions on others. Managing this trade-off

is particularly difficult at the multilateral level, where the differences among States are the

most pronounced. Second, the extent to which different international economic forces can

intrude on a country’s policy space also varies. I n particular, cross-border financial

activities, as Kindleberger (1986) noted in his seminal discussion of international public

goods, appear to be a particularly intrusive factor. But in today’s world of diminished

political and legal restraints on cross-border economic transactions, finance is not the only

such source; as chapter V notes, there are also very large asymmetries in international

production, in particular with the lead firms in international production networks, which are

also altering the space available to policymakers.

The growing interdependence among States and markets provides the main rationale

for a well-structured system of global economic governance with multilateral rules and

disciplines. I n principle, such a system should ensure the provision of global public goods

such as international economic and financial stability and a more open trading system. I n

addition, it should be represented by coherent multilateral institutional arrangements

created by intergovernmental agreements to voluntarily reduce sovereignty on a reciprocal

basis. The guiding principle of such arrangements should be their ability to generate fair

and inclusive outcomes. This principle should inform the design, implementation and

enforcement of multilateral rules, disciplines and support mechanisms. These would

contribute significantly to minimizing adverse international spillovers and other negative

externalities created by national economic policies that focus on maximizing national

benefits. From this perspective, how these arrangements manage the interface between

different national systems (from which they ultimately draw their legitimacy), rather than

erasing national differences and establishing a singular and omnipotent economic and legal

structure, best describes the objectives of multilateralism.

The extent to which national development strategies respond to national needs and

priorities can be limited or circumscribed by multilateral regimes and international rules,

but equally, they can be influenced by economic and political pressures emanating from the

workings of global markets, depending on the degree of integration of the country

concerned. While the extent and depth of engagement with the global economy may result

from domestic economic policy choices, subsequent policies are likely to be affected by

that engagement, sometimes in a way and to an extent not anticipated. As noted in TDR

2006, it is not only international treaties and rules, but also global market conditions and

policy decisions in other countries that have an impact on policy space. Global imbalances

of power (both economic and political) also remain undeniably significant in affecting the

capacities of governments of different countries to engage in the design and implementation

of autonomous policies.

There are valid concerns that the various legal obligations emerging from

multilateral, regional and bilateral agreements have reduced national policy autonomy by

restricting both the available range and the efficacy of particular policy instruments. At the

same time, multilateral disciplines can operate to reduce the inherent bias of international

economic relations in favour of countries that have greater economic or political power

(Akyüz, 2007). Those disciplines can simultaneously restrict (particularly de jure) and ease

(particularly de facto) policy space. In addition, the effectiveness of national policies tends

to be weakened, in some instances very significantly, by the global spread of market forces

(especially financial markets) as well as by the internalization of markets within the

operations of large international firms.

It is important to consider whether, how and to what extent policy space is reduced

and reconfigured. Limits on policy space resulting from obligations or pressures to

deregulate markets tend to circumscribe the ability of governments to alter patterns of

market functioning to meet their broader social and developmental objectives. Yet

unfettered market processes are unlikely to deliver macroeconomic and financial stability,

full employment, economic diversification towards higher value added activities, poverty

reduction and other socially desirable outcomes.

But while national policies are obviously affected by the extent of policy space

available, as determined by the external context, they are also − and still fundamentally −

the result of domestic forces. These include, among others, politics and the political

economy that determine the power and voice of different groups in society, domestic

expertise and capacities, the nature of institutions and enforcement agencies, the structure

of the polity (e.g. degree of federalism), and prevailing macroeconomic conditions. Even

when policymakers have full sovereign command over policy instruments, they may not be

able to control specific policy targets effectively.

Furthermore, the interplay between these internal and external forces in determining

both policymaking and implementation within countries in today’s globalized world is an

increasingly complex process. The emergence in the 1980s and 1990s, and the growing

acceptance by policymakers throughout the world, of what could be called a standard

template for national economic policies — irrespective of the size, context and nature of the

economy concerned — was certainly influential (even if not always decisive) in

determining patterns of market liberalization. But even as waves of trade liberalization and

financial deregulation swept across the world, culminating in what we experience as

globalization today, variations across individual countries suggest that they have retained

some degree of policy autonomy, along with relatively independent thinking.

Certainly, for the more developed countries, globalization à la carte has been the

practice to date, as it has been for the more successful developing countries over the past 20

years. By contrast, many developing countries have had to contend with a more rigid and

structured approach to economic liberalization. This one size-fits-all approach to

development policy has, for the most part, been conducted by or through the Bretton

Woods institutions — the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) —

whose surveillance and influence over domestic policymakers following the debt crises of

the 1980s were considerably extended giving them greater authority to demand changes to

what they deemed to be “unsound” policies. Countries seeking financial assistance or debt

rescheduling from the Bank or the IMF had to adopt approved macroeconomic stability

programmes and agree to “structural” and political reforms, which extended the influence

of markets — via liberalization, privatization and deregulation, among others — and

substantially reduced the economic and developmental roles of the State. Similarly, and as

discussed in greater detail in the next chapter, the Uruguay Round of trade negotiations

extended the authority of the World Trade Organization (WTO) to embrace services,

agriculture, intellectual property and trade-related investment measures, thereby restricting,

to varying degrees, the policy space available to developing countries to manage their

integration into the global economy.

Emphasizing the role of policy, and of the international economic institutions in

promoting one set of policies over another, is an important correction to the view that

globalization is an autonomous, irresistible and irreversible process driven by impersonal

market and technological forces. Such forces are undoubtedly important, but essentially

they are instigated by specific policy choices and shaped by existing institutions. It is also

misleading to think of the global economy as some sort of “natural” system with a logic of

its own. It is, and always has been, the evolving outcome of a complex interaction of

economic and political relations. I n this environment, multilateral rules and institutions can

provide incentives and sanctions that encourage countries to cooperate rather than go their

own way. And as the world has become increasingly interdependent, it is more challenging

for countries to build institutional structures and safeguard remaining flexibilities in support

of inclusive development. To the extent that markets and firms operate globally, there are

grounds for having global rules and regulations. Moreover, international collective action is

needed to help provide and manage global public goods that markets are unable or

unwilling to provide. Dealing effectively with emerging threats, such as climate change,

also requires appropriate global rules, regulations and resources. However, it goes without

saying that governance at the international level is very different from governance at the

national level, given that governments are being asked to surrender some measure of their

sovereignty and responsibility to support collective actions and goals. It is imperative,

therefore, and all the more so in a world of interdependent but unequal States and

economies, for international measures to be designed in such a way that they complement

or strengthen capacities to achieve national objectives and meet the needs of their

constituencies.

The system that has evolved under finance-led globalization has led to a multiplicity

of rules and regulations on international trade and investment that tend to excessively

constrain national policy options. At the same time it lacks an effective multilateral

framework of rules and institutions for ensuring international financial stability and for

overseeing extra-territorial fiscal matters. Within this imperfect system, policymakers in

developed countries are aiming to tackle a series of interrelated macroeconomic and

structural challenges, while those from developing countries are trying to consolidate recent

gains and enter a new phase of inclusive development. I t is therefore more important than

ever before for national policy space to be made a central issue on the global development

agenda.

UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor-State

Arbitration, General Assembly resolution 68/109 excerpts

Article 1. Scope of application

Applicability of the Rules

1. The UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor-State Arbitration

(“Rules on Transparency”) shall apply to investor-State arbitration initiated under the

UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules pursuant to a treaty providing for the protection of

investments or investors (“treaty”)* concluded on or after 1 April 2014 unless the

Parties to the treaty** have agreed otherwise.

2. In investor-State arbitrations initiated under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules pursuant

to a treaty concluded before 1 April 2014, these Rules shall apply only when:

(a) The parties to an arbitration (the “disputing parties”) agree to their

application in respect of that arbitration; or

(b) The Parties to the treaty or, in the case of a multilateral treaty, the State of the

claimant and the respondent State, have agreed after 1 April 2014 to their application.

Application of the Rules

3. In any arbitration in which the Rules on Transparency apply pursuant to a treaty or to an

agreement by the Parties to that treaty:

(a) The disputing parties may not derogate from these Rules, by agreement or

otherwise, unless permitted to do so by the treaty;

(b) The arbitral tribunal shall have the power, besides its discretionary authority

under certain provisions of these Rules, to adapt the requirements of any specific provision

of these Rules to the particular circumstances of the case, after consultation with the

disputing parties, if such adaptation is necessary to conduct the arbitration in a practical

manner and is consistent with the transparency objective of these Rules.

Discretion and authority of the arbitral tribunal

4. Where the Rules on Transparency provide for the arbitral tribunal to exercise discretion,

the arbitral tribunal in exercising such discretion shall take into account:

(a) The public interest in transparency in treaty-based investor-State arbitration

and in the particular arbitral proceedings; and

(b) The disputing parties’ interest in a fair and efficient resolution of their

dispute.

5. These Rules shall not affect any authority that the arbitral tribunal may otherwise have

under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules to conduct the arbitration in such a manner as

to promote transparency, for example by accepting submissions from third persons.

6. In the presence of any conduct, measure or other action having the effect of wholly

undermining the transparency objectives of these Rules, the arbitral tribunal shall

ensure that those objectives prevail.

Applicable instrument in case of conflict

7. Where the Rules on Transparency apply, they shall supplement any applicable

arbitration rules. Where there is a conflict between the Rules on Transparency and the

applicable arbitration rules, the Rules on Transparency shall prevail. Notwithstanding

any provision in these Rules, where there is a conflict between the Rules on

Transparency and the treaty, the provisions of the treaty shall prevail.

8. Where any of these Rules is in conflict with a provision of the law applicable to the

arbitration from which the disputing parties cannot derogate, that provision shall

prevail.

9. These Rules are available for use in investor-State arbitrations initiated under rules

other than the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules or in ad hoc proceedings.

Draft Declaration on the Right to International Solidarity of the

Independent Expert on human rights and international solidarity

(A/HRC/26/34) excerpts

Article 9

1. In the elaboration and implementation of international agreements and related

standards, States shall ensure that the procedures and outcomes are fully consistent

with their human rights obligations in matters pertaining to, inter alia, international

trade, investment, finance, taxation, climate change, environmental protection,

humanitarian relief and assistance, development cooperation and security.

2. States shall take appropriate, transparent and inclusive action to consult their

populations and fully inform them of the decisions agreed upon at the national,

bilateral, regional and international levels, in particular on matters that affect their

lives.

Article 10

1. States shall establish an appropriate institutional framework and adopt domestic

measures to give effect to the right of peoples and individuals to international

solidarity, in particular by ensuring and facilitating access for everyone to domestic

and international legislative, judicial or administrative mechanisms:

(a) When failure of States to fulfil their commitments made at the regional and

international levels results in denials and violations of human rights; and

(b) When actions and omissions by non-State actors adversely affect the exercise

and full enjoyment of their human rights.

2. States shall promote and prioritize support for micro, small and medium community

based and cooperative enterprises which generate the majority of jobs around the

world, including through national and international grants and concessional loans.

3. States shall be guided by International Labour Organization Recommendation No. 202

(2012) concerning National Floors of Social Protection, with a view to securing

universal access to social services.

Article 11

1. States shall implement a human rights-based approach to international cooperation and

all partnerships in responding to global challenges such as those relating to:

(a) Global governance, regulation and sustainability in the areas of climate

change, protection of the environment, humanitarian relief and assistance, trade,

finance, taxation, debt relief, technology transfer to developing countries, social

protection, universal health coverage, reproductive and sexual health, food security,

management of water and renewable energy resources, social standards, free education

for all, human rights education, migration, and labour, and in countering dumping of

toxic wastes, and transnational organized crime, such as terrorism, human trafficking,

piracy and proliferation of arms.

2. States shall establish and implement appropriate mechanisms to ensure that

international cooperation is based on equal partnerships and mutual commitments and

obligations, where partner States are accountable to each other, as well as to their

respective constituents at the national level, for the outcomes of policies, strategies and

performance, whether at the bilateral, regional or international level, which shall reflect

the best interests of their citizens and all others within their jurisdiction, in accordance

with international human rights principles and standards.

3. States shall give effect to the establishment of a fair, inclusive and human rights based

international trade and investment regime where all States shall act in conformity with

their obligation to ensure that no international trade agreement or policy to which they

are a party adversely impacts upon the protection, promotion and fulfilment of human

rights inside or outside of their borders.

Article 12

The right to international solidarity shall impose on States particular negative obligations,

required by applicable international human rights instruments, including:

(a) Not adopting free trade agreements or investment treaties that would

undermine peoples’ livelihoods or other rights;

(b) Not imposing conditionalities in international cooperation that would hinder

or make difficult the exercise and enjoyment of human rights;

(c) Not denying anyone access to life-saving pharmaceuticals and to the benefits

of medical and scientific progress.

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