TY - BOOK AU - Ishikawa,Tomoko TI - Corporate environmental responsibility in investor-state dispute settlement: the unexhausted potential of current mechanisms SN - 9781009076425 (ebook) AV - K1322 .I845 2023 U1 - 346/.066 23/eng/20220801 PY - 2023/// CY - Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY PB - Cambridge University Press KW - International business enterprises KW - Law and legislation KW - Environmental aspects KW - Social responsibility of business KW - International commercial arbitration KW - Investments, Foreign (International law) N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 24 Nov 2022); Introduction : corporate responsibility and the 'one-sidedness' of investment law -- Corporate environmental and human rights obligations in international law : outside and inside the IIA regime -- Counterclaims : benefits, normative grounds and limits -- Counterclaims : jurisdiction and admissibility -- Counterclaims : merits -- Corporate environmental responsibility and the investor's principal claims -- Concluding remarks N2 - This book explores the potential of the current investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism to materialise the responsibility of foreign investors through the states' counterclaims and defences at the jurisdictional, merits, and quantum phases. In doing so, it seeks to incorporate the recent developments of ISDS in both international and domestic laws of certain jurisdictions on corporate responsibility, including the parent company's due diligence and legal effects of corporations' voluntary commitments. The book also reflects the interests and perspectives of the victims who suffered loss and injury due to investors' conduct. The author demonstrates that the current system does have the inherent potential to advance responsible investment, even though reforms are needed to overcome its limitations. Fully utilising this potential to reflect investor responsibility in IIA-based dispute settlement mechanisms will help to develop practices based on greater due diligence and responsible business conduct UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009076425 ER -