Investor-State Arbitration in Digital Age

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Investor-State Arbitration in the Digital Age: Examining the Implications of Technology

and Data Sovereignty on International Investment Law


Aditi Solanki

Abstract
Since the process of globalisation started, the economic growth of the nations has been
greatly dependent upon international investments. Due to this, there was a great need of
standard rules and statutes to regulate the process of international investment in order to
provide legal protection as incentives for the parties to invest. As a consequence of this
process, international investment law has emerged in order to provide legal framework
governing the rights and obligations of the parties along with providing them with dispute
resolution mechanisms. The most popular method of dispute resolution being adopted by the
parties is investor-state arbitration.

Furthermore, the international investment law plays an important role in the promotion as
well as protection of the practice of Foreign Direct Investment by providing a set of rules and
regulations that specify the rights and obligations of the parties which include the states and
the investors. It provides a legal framework with provisions focusing upon dispute resolution,
expropriation, fair and equitable treatments and investment promotion and protection
agreements, inter alia and thus, provides the investors and states with a stable and predictable
environment which promotes economic growth and development.

Amongst the various dispute resolution mechanisms provided under the International
Investment laws, investor-state arbitration has become a primary method of resolving
conflicts amongst the parties. Before this mechanism was put in place, the investors had to
rely on the diplomatic protection that was offered by their home states. However, after the
start of the process of globalisation and a rise in the practice in foreign investment, this
mechanism was found ineffective and thus, the concept of investor-state arbitration at an
international level emerged, under which, the investors can approach a neutral tribunal, which
enables them to seek redress directly against the host state for the alleged breaches. These
mechanisms are provided at specialized arbitral institutions, which primarily include the
International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, and other regional mechanisms
like the Permanent Court of Arbitration as well as the International Chamber of Commerce.
This research paper aims to analyse the evolution of the international investment law and
study the practices adopted in the process of investor-state arbitration. By examining this, the
researcher further aims to provide ways to address the concerns of the parties in the process
and discuss the future of investor-state arbitration process and study the impact of
Technological advancements on International investment law and Investor-State Arbitration

Research Objectives
i. To understand the disciplines of international investment law and the remedies
provided
ii. To study the modern system of investor-state arbitration
iii. To study the impact of Technological advancements on International investment
law and Investor-State Arbitration

Statement of Problem
The proliferation of globalization has engendered a substantial augmentation in global trade,
thereby escalating the demand for comprehensive frameworks of international investment
law. Nonetheless, akin to any legal construct, the domain of international investment law is
not devoid of lacunae. Thus, imperative is the discernment and elucidation of its fundamental
tenets and principles. This research endeavor is dedicated to an exhaustive examination of the
cardinal disciplines within international investment law, with a particular focus on the
mechanism of investor-state arbitration as a primary mode of dispute resolution. Furthermore,
it undertakes a rigorous critique of the extant legal regime to afford a perspicacious appraisal
of the prospective trajectory of international investment law.

Introduction to International Investment Law


Investment treaty law and international investment law are the same as the law of investment
treaties as interpreted and applied by investment treaty tribunals. Despite having certain
private components, international investment law has become a branch of public international
law during the past few decades. Along with a few free trade agreements, including the North
American Free Trade Agreement, the discipline consists of several bilateral investment
treaties. The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, which codified much of the law of
treaties, and a set of draft articles that the International Law Commission adopted in 2001,
which codified the law of state responsibility, are other significant sources of general public
international law that are referred to in this passage.1
1
Report of the International Law Commission, 53rd Sess, Supp No 10, UN Doc a/56/10 (2001).
The arbitration procedure serves as the foundation for current international investment law.
The ability of an investor to use the treaty’s mandatory dispute settlement clauses to begin
arbitration proceedings against a host state is a typical feature in international investment
agreements. This opens up the option of suing for damages if any of the rules of that specific
treaty are broken. The ratification of an international investment agreement by a state
establishes that state’s agreement to arbitrate. A state is not required to acquire consent for
each potential conflict individually, though. Both the Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm
Chamber of Commerce and the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes
are often used arbitration venues in these situations. The agreement itself serves as the
foundation for the law and legal provisions that may be implemented in this procedure, which
is followed by the state’s domestic law and the pertinent principles of general international
law.

In the present times, the practice of the states is to respond to concerns regarding the fairness
of compulsory arbitration by refusing to take part in the arbitration process. On the other
hand, other states have also terminated their consent to dispute settlement in certain
arbitration forums.

There are various sources of international investment law including treaties, convention,
customs etc. However, the primary sources can be categorised as follows:

A. Bilateral treaties

In the field of international investment law, which is dominated by bilateral treaties, custom
and general principles are limited to concretizing and providing interpretive background for
treaty norms. As such, they could be viewed as the antithesis of multilateralism, a highly
fragmented patchwork of bilateral agreements. International investment agreements’ dispute
resolution protocols contribute to the multilateralization of international investment law.
Arbitrators chosen from a relatively small pool of arbitration specialists who are appointed in
a sizable portion of cases arbitrate matters in accordance with the treaties. 2 Despite having
differing opinions on many points of international investment law, this particular panel of
arbitrators shares a common understanding of the core structural components and substantive
ideas of the field, which promotes the convergence that characterizes a multilateral regime.

B. Arbitral Precedent
2
Sergio Puig, Social Capital in the Arbitration Market, 25 EJIL 387, 424 (2014); See also Joost Pauwelyn, The
Rule of Law Without the Rule of Lawyers? Why Investment Arbitrators Are from Mars, Trade Adjudicators
from Venus, 109 AJIL,761, 805 (2015).
Article 38 (1) (d) of the ICJ Statute states that judicial rulings are “subsidiary means for the
determination of rules of law,” not sources in and of themselves. The same is true of
decisions made by investment treaty tribunals, which are not sources in the traditional sense
but rather instruments for evaluating the content of international investment law. Their lower
status in the hierarchy of sources should not, however, conceal the fact that arbitral tribunal
decisions regarding the rights and obligations under international investment law are
becoming more and more the main source for defining these rights and obligations.
Therefore, the manner in which these frequently ambiguous norms and concepts in
international investment agreements have been used, moulded, and expanded upon by
investment treaty courts in previous instances is what ultimately determines the result of
investor-State conflicts. Put differently, arbitral precedent becomes the primary source of
reference for determining the substance of international investment law.

The statement of the Tribunal in Saipem v Bangladesh is representative of a position that has
widely taken hold among investment arbitrators:

“The Tribunal considers that it is not bound by previous decisions. At the same time, it is of
the opinion that it must pay due consideration to earlier decisions of international tribunals.
It believes that, subject to compelling contrary grounds, it has a duty to adopt solutions
established in a series of consistent cases. It also believes that, subject to the specifics of a
given treaty and of the circumstances of the actual case, it has a duty to seek to contribute to
the harmonious development of investment law and thereby to meet the legitimate
expectations of the community of States and investors towards certainty of the rule of law.”3

C. Comparative law

In addition to giving arbitral precedent more weight, the inclusion of mandated dispute
resolution procedures in international investment law also has an impact on the process of
resolving investment conflicts by influencing the integration of sources beyond the
conventional canon of sources. Notable progress in this area has been made by applying
comparative law to comprehend and implement investment accords. Lemire v. Ukraine,
which examined, in a rather selective and disorganized manner, the application of similar
requirements in a variety of domestic legal systems of third-countries to determine whether
the requirement to radio-broadcast a certain percentage of Ukrainian music was in violation

3
Saipem SpA v. People’s Republic of Bangladesh, ICSID Case No ARB/05/07, Decision on Jurisdiction and
Provisional Measures, para 67 (2007).
of FET, is an example of a haphazard application of comparative law. 4 Article 38 (1) (c) of
the ICJ Statute must be taken into consideration when interpreting international investment
agreements as “relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the
parties,” as per Article 31 (3) (c) of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.
Notwithstanding these diverse functions, comparative law’s potential impact on international
investment law is limited by the degree of interpretative discretion afforded by the relevant
treaty regulations.

D. Soft law

Comparative law is just one non-traditional source that influences how investment treaties are
interpreted and investment disputes are resolved. Non-binding soft law instruments created
by a variety of parties, including private, non-governmental organizations and
intergovernmental and international organizations, also have an influence on modern
international investment law. When it comes to managing investor-State conflict settlement,
soft law tools are very crucial.

The first category of soft law consists of instruments related to the arbitral procedure. Rather
than trying to affect the fundamental rights and duties under International Invest, these
instruments largely deal with procedural legal technicalities and serve managerial reasons. In
addition to this, the International Bar Association (IBA), a legal professional association
whose members are national bar associations, has also established a number of regulations
and recommendations.5

Settlement of Disputes under International Investment Law


The terms “international investment law disciplines” relate to the obligations that the
agreements place on the host state about its interactions with foreign investors and the firms
that it is accountable for. These disciplines are based on the text of the particular treaty;
however, all international investment agreements often share a fundamental element. Such
core contents may be listed as:

i. Non-arbitrary and Non-discriminatory treatment


ii. National treatment
iii. Most favoured Nation Treatment
4
Joseph Charles Lemire v. Ukraine, ICSID Case No ARB/06/18, Decision on Jurisdiction and Liability, para
506, (2010).
5
IBA Guidelines on Party Representation in International Arbitration (5 th June 2024)
http://www.ibanet.org/Publications/publications_IBA_guides_and_free_materials.aspx.
iv. Minimum Standard of Treatment and the fair and equitable treatment standard:
v. Duty not to Expropriate
vi. Full protection and Security
vii. Domestic Requirements
viii. Umbrella Clause

A. Remedies provided to the parties

When a tribunal finds that a host state has disregarded its obligations under an international
investment agreement, it must deal with the question of remedies. The relevant law may
address the remedy problem, even if international investment agreements frequently omit it.
When such constraints are not imposed by the agreements, arbitral courts exercise their
remedial powers in conformity with fundamental principles of international law. In
international arbitration, there are basically two types of remedies available.

Restitution

In international law, restitution is a common form of reparation. Placing the claimant in the
same circumstances as before to the worldwide wrongful behaviour is known as restoring the
status quo ante. reparation is the chosen method of reparation under international law.
According to the ILC’s draft articles on the law of state responsibility, restitution should be
given “provided and to the extent that” it is not “materially impossible,” and it shouldn’t
unfairly burden the state that committed the internationally wrongful act relative to the
potential benefit to the injured state. Restitution may thus be granted in addition to
compensation or satisfaction if an order for restitution does not meet the criteria for complete
repair.

Compensation

Compensation is the appropriate form of restitution in cases where repayment in integrum is


not practical. The only restriction on compensation as a sufficient form of reparation is the
need that the injury be “financially assessable.” This phrase includes both pecuniary and
ethical losses—such as property damage and psychological distress—caused by
internationally illegal behaviour. Like restitution, awards of compensation must “re-establish
the situation which would, in all probability, have existed” prior to the international
misconduct. Therefore, financial compensation must accurately reflect the loss that the victim
of the internationally wrongful activity really suffered, both generally and specifically in the
context of international investment law.

B. Protection through peaceful means of settlement of disputes

The development of peaceful conflict resolution techniques, such as international arbitration,


has gradually drawn the focus of the world community. The original idea was to use these
techniques to resolve disputes between states. Nonetheless, a system of resolving disputes
between governments and private citizens emerged. States originally created international
claims commissions, also known as mixed claims commissions, wherein claims submitted on
behalf of their own citizens or by two States against each other may be heard.

These commissions, which were frequently set up in the wake of major historical events like
revolutions, also made it possible for the claims of private persons to be widely supported
because individual endorsements were rare. This was before the States could be sued directly
by private individuals. Perhaps the first successful attempt to create the basic structure of a
system that would later be greatly altered to be used in disputes between States and foreigners
was the Permanent Court of Arbitration, which was founded by the Hague Peace Conferences
in 1899 and 1907. Based on arbitration clauses in important contracts, the first wave of
arbitral lawsuits against the Soviet Union in the early 1920s probably corresponded with the
creation of the PCA.

In the aftermath of the World War I, the Permanent Court of International Justice was created
in the context of the creation of the League of Nations. Some cases involving investment
disputes, most prominently the Chorzow Factory and Mavrommatis Palestine Concession, 6
were decided by this court. Both cases, however, were submitted through espousal. After
World War II, the successor to the Permanent Court of International Justice, the International
Court of Justice has since ruled on a limited number of cases involving foreign investment,
including the 1953 Anglo Iranian Oil Co. Case, 7 the Barcelona Traction Case,8 and the 1987
Case Concerning Elettronica Sicula S.P.A. (ELSI).9

System of Investor-State Arbitration


In the pursuit of enhancing coherence and lucidity within the prevailing apparatus of
international investment law, several scholars have diligently endeavored to furnish
6
The Mavrommatis Palestine Concessions, 2 P.C.J.I., ser. A 1924, (2018).
7
Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. U.K. v. Iran, 93 I.C.J. 21 (1952).
8
Barcelona Traction Light and Power (Belg. v. Spain) 6 I.C.J. 63 (1964).
9
Elettronica Sicula S.p.A. (ELSI) (U.S. v. It.), 15 I.C.J. 11 (1989).
exhaustive expositions thereof. For instance, Dolzer and Schreuer contend that the
delineation of a discrete category of principles within international investment law is largely a
matter of semantics, given their profound entrenchment within the broader ambit of
international economic law. Nevertheless, the inherent nature, organizational structure, and
overarching objective of international investment law manifest as inherently distinct within
the overarching international legal framework. Zachary Douglas perceives this legal regime
as possessing a “hybrid” character owing to the intricate interplay between domestic
jurisprudence and public international law.

Conversely, Kingsbury and Schill posit its integration into an evolving global administrative
law paradigm, while Santiago Montt characterizes it as a variant of international
administrative law. Gus van Harten classifies the system as a manifestation of public law.
Thomas Wälde underscores the centrality of the State-individual dichotomy in shaping every
instance of investment treaty adjudication, advocating for an interdisciplinary approach
drawing analogies from cognate legal domains to foster comprehension and refinement of the
system, viewing it ultimately as a mechanism for fostering external discipline and promoting
good governance. Stephan Schill advances the notion that bilateral investment treaties serve
as precursors to a unified, comprehensive multilateral investment framework, with particular
emphasis on the function of most-favored-nation provisions.

Certain key aspect of the Investor-State Arbitrationa Process are:

A. Arbitral Rules and Organization of Process

The terms of the bilateral investment treaty, which are frequently accepted by the claimant
when it makes its case, govern the arbitration process. The most often used rules in ad hoc
arbitration are those of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes and
UNCITRAL Arbitration. The methodologies of both sets of legislation are adaptable. All
aspects of a dispute, including the annulment of awards, are handled in compliance with the
International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes regulations under the self-
contained International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes Convention. This might
be the main difference. In contrast, the 1958 New York Convention’s ruling might be
overturned or revoked under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules without resorting to local
courts.

B. Selection and Challenge of Arbitrators


A fundamental idea in arbitration is the independence and impartiality of all arbitrators, and it
is considered that they all possess these qualities. Naturally, parties will often select an
arbitrator who shares their doctrinal views or who they perceive to be biased in Favor of them
due to their legal or cultural background. This inclination is not a qualifying quality as long
as the arbiter is conscious of it and does not allow it to affect his professional judgment. 10
After selection, the arbitrator’s involvement is essential to the procedure. The parties must
function independently in order to ensure that they get equitable treatment throughout the
arbitration. To guarantee the arbitrator’s independence, the parties require the arbitrator to
reveal any facts and circumstances that may reasonably lead to the arbitrator’s
disqualification, such as any legal advice or expert opinion on the dispute provided to a
party.11

One of the grounds invoked for disqualification is the repeated appointment of an arbitrator
by a party. In Burlington v. Ecuador, the defendant claimed that “the lack of disclosure of
the arbitrator’s repeated appointment by the claimant’s law firm was a ground for
recusal.”12However, it was the arbitrator’s conduct in response to Ecuador’s questioning
during the disqualification procedure that resulted in his removal. In another case, Tidewater
v. Venezuela, the claimant’s request for “the disqualification of an arbitrator was rejected
after finding that, although the arbitrator failed to disclose repeated appointments by
Venezuela, the arbitrator had rendered decisions against Venezuela in previous cases.” 13

C. Governing Law, Interpretation Tools and Role of precedents

Choice of law clauses, found in several investment treaties, specify the sources of law to be
consulted, including international law, host State law, and any other relevant agreements.
Article 42 of the ICSID Convention states that in the absence of such provisions,
international law and the law selected by the parties in an ICSID arbitration- or, in the
absence of such a choice, the law of the Contracting State party to the dispute- must be
applied. In a UNCITRAL case, the issue will be settled in line with Article 33, which

10
R. Doak Bishop & Lucy Reed, Practical Guidelines for Interviewing, Selecting and Challenging Party-
Appointed Arbitrators in International Commercial Arbitration, 2 Arb. Int’l 14 (1998).
http://www.nadr.co.uk/articles/published/arbitration/ SelectingArbitrators.pdf.
11
International Bar Association (IBA) Guidelines on Conflicts of Interests in International Arbitration, Section
2.1.1. Waivable Red List (2014).
12
Burlington Resources Inc. v. Republic of Ecuador, ICSID Case No. ARB/08/5, Decision on the Proposal for
Disqualification of Professor Francisco Orrego Vicuña.
13
Tidewater Inc., Tidewater Investment SRL, Tidewater Caribe, C.A., et al. v. The Bolivarian Republic of
Venezuela, ICSID Case No. ARB/10/5, Decision on Claimants’ Proposal to Disqualify Professor Brigitte Stern,
Arbitrator.
specifies that the tribunal will apply the appropriate laws if the parties cannot agree on
anything.

D. Jurisdiction

The main criterion for establishing jurisdiction is the parties’ consent. Furthermore, in order
to establish a claim, a foreign investor must show that, (1) their investment satisfies the
requirements set out in the bilateral investment treaty, and (2) they are eligible to be investors
under the provisions of the treaty. If the claim is brought to the International Centre for
Settlement of Investment Disputes, the investor must further fulfil the requirements of the
International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes Convention.

E. Legality of Investments

It may seem axiomatic that for investments to enjoy the benefits of a treaty, they must first
have been created in accordance with relevant domestic laws. Some investment treaties spell
out this requirement and arbitral tribunals such as Incense v. El Salvador14 relying on such
clauses, have “dismissed cases where foreign investors had circumvented the local laws.
Related to that are implications of corruption and the applicability of doctrine of unclean
hand in investment treaty arbitration”

F. Investors

Article 25 of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes Convention and
contemporary investment treaties define an investor as both a natural and a legal person,
including businesses, state-owned enterprises, sovereign wealth funds, and even nonprofit
organizations. The phenomenon of “treaty shopping” and “forum shopping,” in which foreign
investors establish corporations of convenience to satisfy the nationality requirement of
various BITs, in order to benefit from a treaty, has been a persistent problem for host States
15
over the past few years. The employment of different businesses and people in the
ownership chain by investors to file several claims against the host State of the investment is
a similar problem. A case has occasionally been rejected by arbitral tribunals on the basis that
these methods have been deemed abusive. But it’s unclear exactly when these kinds of
assertions ought to be rejected. As seen in the Phoenix v. Czech Republic case, logic and
principle of international law, such as rationed temporis limitations, seem to dictate that
restructuring for the purpose of bringing claims that are foreseeable should be considered
14
Alasdair Ross Anderson and Others v. Costa Rica, ICSID Case No ARB(AF)/07/3, IIC 437.
15
Venezuela Holdings v. Venezuela, ICSID Case No. ARB/07/27, Decision on jurisdiction.
abusive and impressible.16 But so far, no consistent practice has been developed on this
issue.”

G. State Defences

In order to defend their disregard for their international commitments, host governments may
invoke a number of defences. These defences mostly stem from the “circumstances
precluding wrongfulness” listed in the International Law Commission’s Articles on State
Responsibility, which include force majeure, distress, and necessity. In the charges brought
against it during the 2001–2002 financial crisis, Argentina specifically used the definition of
need. Investment treaties may also include clauses that restrict the obligation of the State in
the event of conflict, war, or other issues. In the context of the same set of instances,
Argentina utilized these clauses. In investment treaty arbitration there is limited opportunity
for host States to bring counterclaims, even though, in theory, all arbitration rules allow
counterclaims so long as the claim is within the scope of parties’ consent to arbitration.

H. Compensation, Damages and valuation

Since it requires tight coordination and participation from valuation and economic
professionals, determining damages in an international arbitration is arguably the most
difficult part of the process. When it comes to compensation in expropriation circumstances,
investment treaties frequently require payment of fair market value, as assessed just before to
expropriation. The Chorzów Factory case is most commonly cited as the source of the
concept of damages related to other aspects of bilateral investment treaties, such as fair and
equitable treatment and national treatment, and compensation for unlawful expropriation. The
Permanent court of international justice held that “reparation must, as far as possible, wipe
out all the consequences of the illegal act and reestablish the situation which would, in all
probability, have existed if that act had not been committed.”

I. Annulment and Enforcement

After an award has been made, the losing party may attempt to change or reverse the
decision. There are few grounds for contesting arbitral verdicts under the International Centre
for Settlement of Investment Disputes Convention and the New York Convention that is
applicable in non-ICSID matters, with the main emphasis being on whether the arbitral
procedure was carried out correctly rather than on the merits. Therefore, it is commonly

16
Phoenix Action, Ltd. v. The Czech Republic, ICSID Case No. ARB/06/5.
accepted that procedures for nullifying investment treaty arbitration verdicts are not appeals.
In exceptional circumstances, however, arbitration awards and commentators consider
annulling an award for manifest errors of law which is not dissimilar to an appeal.17

Implications of Technology and Data Sovereignty on Investor-State Arbitration


The implications of technology and data sovereignty on investor-state arbitration are
multifaceted, touching upon definitions of protected investments and investors, territorial
nexus, and standards of treatment and protection within International Investment Agreements.

Firstly, the definition of “investment” under International Investment Agreements has


traditionally been broad, often encompassing “every kind of asset” including movable and
immovable property, shares, claims, business concessions, and intellectual property rights 18.
This breadth allows digital assets, such as cryptocurrencies, digital shares, and tokenized
rights, to potentially fall within the scope of protected investments, provided they meet
certain characteristics, such as the commitment of resources, a certain duration, and an
element of risk. For instance, Switzerland’s Distributed Ledger Technology law has
facilitated the tokenization of rights and financial instruments, thereby including digital
shares within the scope of protected investments19.

In the context of data sovereignty, data localization requirements pose significant challenges.
Some countries mandate that data generated within their borders be stored locally. This can
conflict with International Investment Agreements’ national treatment provisions, which
require that foreign investors be treated no less favorably than domestic investors. Data
localization can lead to disputes if foreign digital service providers feel discriminated
against20.

The territorial nexus of digital investments further complicates matters. Traditional


International Investment Agreements require a physical presence within the host state to
establish a territorial link. However, digital investments often lack a physical presence,
making it difficult to ascertain where the investment is “located” 21. For instance, cloud

17
Occidental v. Ecuador, 2015.
18
Yannaca-Small & Liberti, International Investment Law: Understanding Concepts and Tracking Innovations:
A Companion Volume to International Investment Perspectives, OECD 46 (2008).
19
Chaisse & Bauer, Cybersecurity and the Protection of Digital Assets: Assessing the Role of International
Investment Law and Arbitration, 21 VJETL 559 (2019).
20
Zhang & Mitchell, Data Localization and the National Treatment Obligation in International Investment
Treaties, WTR 4 (2021).
21
Horváth & Klinkmüller, The Concept of ‘Investment’ in the Digital Economy: The Case of Social Media
Companies, 20 JWIT 581 (2019).
computing and data processing may occur in multiple jurisdictions simultaneously,
challenging the traditional notion of territoriality22.

Moreover, the standard of treatment, particularly Fair and Equitable Treatment and Full
Protection and Security, also needs adaptation to address digital threats like cyber-attacks.
Tribunals have traditionally interpreted Full Protection and Security to cover physical
protection, but there is growing advocacy for its extension to legal and digital security, given
the increasing significance of digital assets23.

Additionally, investor definitions in International Investment Agreements may need revision


to accommodate digital identities. The rise of e-residency programs, such as those in Estonia
and Ukraine, which allow individuals to establish and manage businesses online, challenges
the traditional understanding of investor nationality and permanent residency 24. These
programs grant digital identities without physical residency, raising questions about the
eligibility of e-residents for protections under International Investment Agreements25.

Conclusion
Thus, it may be concluded that with the rise in the process of globalisation, there has been an
increase in international commerce and consequentially, international investment law has to
be developed in order to regulate and control such processes. The primary sources of the law
are Bilateral treaties, soft law, arbitral precedents and comparative law. However, there are
other sources of the international investment law as well. There are some primary disciplines
upon which the whole process of international investment is based, which include principles
such as fair and equitable treatment, non-arbitrary treatments, most favoured nation treatment
and so on. These are subject to some restrictions as well.

Furthermore, the remedies provided under the international investment law may be primarily
categorised as compensation and restitution which can be achieved through the process of
investor-state arbitration. The key aspects of the process include the unique arbitral rules and
organisation of the process, the neutrality of the arbitrator and challenge of the appointment
of arbitrator on various grounds including the same, weightage given to the arbitral

22
Polanco, The Impact of Digitalization on International Investment Law: Are Investment Treaties Analogue or
Digital?, 24 GLJ 583 (2023).
23
Chaisse & Bauer Supra, p. 576.
24
Alschner, Elsig, & Polanco, Introducing the Electronic Database of Investment Treaties The Genesis of a New
Database and Its Use, 20 WTR 73 (2020).
25
Polanco Supra, p. 581.
precedents in the process, the primacy given to the parties in the selection of jurisdiction and
the legality of instruments, among others.

Hence, as the process of globalisation is only increasing due to improved connectivity, it may
be said that the international investment law is going to be increasingly important in such
circumstances due to cross-nation trade and investment. Therefore, it is important to remove
the anomalies present in the law and make it easy for the parties to approach the various
international institution in order to solve disputes.

Furthermore, while IIAs are primarily designed for “brick-and-mortar” investments, their
broadly defined protections can extend to digital assets if interpreted flexibly. However, the
lack of explicit provisions for digital investments necessitates cautious inclusion of digital
transformation commitments in IIAs to avoid increased investor-state disputes. As
digitalization progresses, the investment law regime must evolve, balancing the need for
investor protection with states’ regulatory autonomy in the digital economy.

Balancing the incorporation of technology and data sovereignty within investor-state


arbitration necessitates a nuanced interpretation of IIAs. Originally crafted for traditional
investments, these agreements must now extend their broad definitions to encompass digital
assets, reflecting the complexities of the digital era. Meticulous consideration is required to
prevent an escalation of disputes. Harmonizing robust protection for digital investments with
the sovereign regulatory prerogatives of states is imperative. As international investment law
adapts to the exigencies of digitalization, addressing these challenges will be paramount to
preserving the system’s efficacy and equity.

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