What is it about?
International Investment arbitration has been the target of substantial criticism in recent years, and many people around the world, from civil society, to NGOs, academics, (even Donald Trump) have been expressing concern. Many have asked the question, why don’t we just get rid of the system? Well, one country —Ecuador— tried to do just that. Ecuador not only exited the ICSID convention, and terminated all its Investment Treaties, it also introduced a constitutional prohibition to prevent future governments from re-entering the regime. However, this process was not as smooth as expected. It took more than a decade after the decision to exit the regime before Ecuador had effectively denounced all its treaties and now Ecuador is one of the last destinations for investment flows in Latin America.
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Why is it important?
Ecuador’s decision and the long road taken to terminate the totality of its BITs constitutes a unique case for studying the legitimacy of the international investment regime because Ecuador is one of the few developing countries that has taken the radical decision to terminate all of its connections with the international investment regime. In addition, Ecuador was one of the first countries to introduce an express constitutional clause to forbid the state from entering into such agreements. In this light, this process is a key case study for those studying the interplay between constitutional law and international investment law on the one hand and the alleged constitutionalization of international investment law on the other. I further claim that specific principles of investment should be used rather than prohibitions on constitutional texts.
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This page is a summary of: Ecuador’s 2017 Termination of Treaties: How Not to Exit the International Investment Regime, Revista de Direito Internacional, October 2017, Programa de Mestrado e Doutorado em Direito do Uniceub,
DOI: 10.5102/rdi/bjil.v14i2.4720.
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