Columbia FDI Perspectives
From Columbia University, Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI)
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- 61: Different investment treaties, different effects

- Clint Peinhardt and Todd Allee
- 60: National companies or foreign affiliates: Whose contribution to growth is greater?

- Alice H. Amsden
- 59: The (lack of) women arbitrators in investment treaty arbitration

- Gus Van Harten
- 58: The public law challenge: Killing or rethinking international investment law?

- Stephan W. Schill
- 57: Nation states and nationality of MNEs

- Seev Hirsch
- 56: Towards the successful implementation of the updated OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises

- Tadahiro Asami
- 55: FDI stocks are a biased measure of MNE affiliate activity: A response

- Mira Wilkins
- 54: Investment incentives and the global competition for capital

- Kenneth P. Thomas
- 53: Knowledge, FDI and catching-up strategies

- Francisco Sercovich
- 52: FDI in retailing and inflation: The case of India

- Nandita Dasgupta
- 51: Greek FDI in the Balkans: How is it affected by the crisis in Greece?

- Persephone Economou and Margo Thomas
- 50: Responsible business conduct: Re-shaping global business

- John Evans
- 49: Chinese FDI in the United States is taking off: How to maximize its benefits?

- Thilo Hanemann and Daniel Rosen
- 48: The new Dutch sandwich: The issue of treaty abuse

- George Kahale
- 47: Shaping global business conduct: The 2011 update of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises

- Manfred Schekulin
- 46: Beyond treasuries: A foreign direct investment program for U.S. infrastructure

- Geraldine McAllister and Joel H. Moser
- 45: FDI stocks are a biased measure of foreign affiliate activity

- Sjoerd Beugelsdijk, Jean-Francois Hennart, Arjen Slangen and Roger Smeets
- 44: Environmental concerns in international investment agreements: The 'new era' has commenced, but harmonization remains far off

- Kathryn Gordon and Joachim Pohl
- 43: The world economic crisis as a changed circumstance

- Hermann Ferré and Kabir Duggal
- 42: From the FDI Triad to multiple FDI poles?

- Persephone Economou and Karl P. Sauvant
- 41: Emerging challengers in knowledge-based industries? The case of Indian pharmaceutical multinationals

- Gert Bruche
- 40: Why and how least developed countries can receive more FDI to meet their development goals

- Ken Davies
- 39: The role of multinationals in sparking industrialization: From 'infant industry protection' to 'FDI-led industrial take-off'

- Terutomo Ozawa
- 38: Responsible agricultural investment: is there a significant role for the law to promote sustainability?

- Nicolás Marcelo Perrone
- 37: The coming harmonization of climate change policy and international investment law

- Daniel M. Firger
- 36: Are resurging state-owned enterprises impeding competition overseas?

- Nilgün Gökgür
- 35: Is the party-appointed arbitrator a 'pernicious institution'? A reply to Professor Hans Smit

- Giorgio Sacerdoti
- 34: The backstory of China and India's growing investment and trade with Africa: Separating the wheat from the chaff

- Harry G. Broadman
- 33: The pernicious institution of the party-appointed arbitrator

- Hans Smit
- 32: State-controlled entities as claimants in international investment arbitration: an early assessment

- Michael D. Nolan and Frédéric G. Sourgens
- 31: How much do U.S. corporations know (and care) about bilateral investment treaties? Some hints from new survey evidence

- Jason Webb Yackee
- 30: What will an appreciation of China's currency do to inward and outward FDI?

- Karl P. Sauvant and Ken Davies
- 29: Mining for facts: PacRim Cayman LLC v. El Salvador

- Alexandre de Gramont
- 28: Will China relocate its labor-intensive factories to Africa, flying-geese style?

- Terutomo Ozawa and Christian Bellak
- 27: Political risk insurance and bilateral investment treaties: a view from below

- Lauge Skovgaard Poulsen
- 26: FDI incentives pay – politically

- Nathan M. Jensen and Edmund J. Malesky
- 25: The response to the global crisis and investment protection: evidence

- Kathryn Gordon and Joachim Pohl
- 24: Foreign direct investment and U.S. national security: CFIUS under the Obama Administration

- Mark E. Plotkin and David N. Fagan
- 23: Thinking twice about a gold rush: Pacific Rim v El Salvador

- Gus Van Harten
- 22: How BRIC MNEs deal with international political risk

- Premila Nazareth Satyanand
- 21: Is a model EU BIT possible – or even desirable?

- Armand de Mestral C.M.
- 20: It's time for an EU investment promotion agency

- José Guimón
- 19: U.S. BITs and financial stability

- Kevin P. Gallagher
- 18: President Obama's international tax proposals could go further

- Reuven S. Avi-Yonah
- 17: International investment law and media disputes: a complement to WTO law

- Luke Eric Peterson
- 16: Can the U.S. remain an attractive host for FDI in the auto industry? New labor policy and flexible production

- Terutomo Ozawa
- 15: The global economic crisis and FDI flows to emerging markets: for the first time ever, emerging markets are this year set to attract more than half of global FDI flows

- Laza Kekic
- 14: Sovereign wealth funds: much ado about some money

- Charles Kovacs
- 13: The growth of Brazil's direct investment abroad and the challenges it faces

- Luis Afonso Lima and Octavio de Barros
- 12: Outward investment by Trans-Latin enterprises: reasons for optimism

- Michael Mortimore and Carlos Razo
- 11: Indian FDI falls in global economic crisis: Indian multinationals tread cautiously

- Jaya Prakash
- 10: National Security with a Canadian Twist: The Investment Canada Act and the New National Security Review Test

- Subrata Bhattacharjee
- 9: Are SWFs welcome now?

- Veljko Fotak and William Megginson
- 8: Land grab or development opportunity? International farmland deals in Africa

- Lorenzo Cotula
- 7: International investment arbitration: winning, losing and why

- Susan D. Franck
- 6: Improving infrastructure or lowering taxes to attract foreign direct investment?

- Christian Bellak and Markus Leibrecht
- 5: While global FDI fails, China's outward FDI doubles

- Ken Davies
- 4: A new geography of innovation – China and India rising

- Gert Bruche
- 3: The global financial crisis: will state emergency measures trigger international investment disputes?

- Anne van Aaken and Jürgen Kurtz
- 2: The revised national security review process for FDI in the US

- Mark E. Plotkin and David N. Fagan
- 1: The FDI recession has begun

- Karl P. Sauvant