Accountability Before Arbitration: Examining Investor Breaches of Human Rights in Is ds Jurisprudence.
No Thumbnail Available
Files
Date
2025-04
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Law School of India University
Abstract
Investor State Dispute Settlement was designed to safeguard capital– but what happens when these
capital flows bulldoze communities and uproot rights? This dissertation put investment arbitration
under a legal microscope, examining how ICSID tribunal are addressing the dilemma between
profit margins and moral margins. Drawing from available ICSID cases, it traces how tribunals
juggle investor expectations with host state obligations, particularly when the scales tip toward
land dispossessions and environmental harm. By honing in on investor misconduct and tribunals’
interpretative choices, the research exposes the fragility of human rights enforcement in ISDS and
its reluctance in holding the investors accountable. It reveals that while tribunals have the tools
to acknowledge human rights, they often lack the will or the mandate to do so meaningfully. It
contributes to the urgent debate on reimagining investment arbitration as a system responsive not
only to capital flows but also to the dignity of affected communities.