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The Expropriation of Environmental Governance. Protecting Foreign Investors at the Expense of Public Policy BY KYLA TIENAARA xi + 327 pp., 23 × 15 × 2 cm, ISBN 978 0 521 11487 5 hardback, GB£ 50.00/US$ 80.00, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2009

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2011

KEVIN P. GALLAGHER*
Affiliation:
Global Development Policy Program, Department of International Relations, 152 Bay State Road Boston MA 02215, USA e-mail: kpg@bu.edu
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2011

Once upon a time there was colonialism. After World War II, independence became increasingly prevalent. As nations gained their independence, they became starkly aware that large swathes of their wealth were tied up in the ownership of foreign companies. What followed was a rash of nationalizations of these companies across the world. International investment agreements (IIAs) are in part an instrument to create a body of law that protects foreign firms from being nationalized in the contemporary era.

Why should readers of this journal be concerned with economic nationalization and IIAs? Over the past twenty years, according to Teinharra, foreign firms have been interpreting new environmental regulations as being analogous to expropriation and are thereby ‘expropriating environmental governance’. That's why.

IIAs have numerous features and have a close to 30-year history in their contemporary form. While there is significant variation among these treaties, they often share a handful of common elements, such as the requirement that there is a ‘minimum standard of treatment’ for foreign companies (meaning they get equal access to opportunities in the host state relative to domestic firms and the foreign firms of other nations); that expropriation is not permitted with penalty, among other provisions.

What is more, in terms of resolving disputes that arise from an IIA, these treaties more often than not have ‘investor-state’ dispute resolution, whereby the foreign investor may directly file a claim against a host government. Such a dispute could result in a semi-private arbitral panel where the host state could pay damages. Such a method stands in stark contrast to the World Trade Organization, where private investors have to convince national governments to take another national government to an international dispute panel.

For the majority of this book, Kyla Tienhaara outlines the substantive issues around foreign investment and the environment, and how IIAs work. The last third of the volume is most interesting as it offers an analysis regarding the extent to which IIAs make environmental governance more difficult to deploy in a globalizing world. The book's title gives away her conclusion.

Tienharra walks through numerous cases where foreign firms use IIAs and contracts to take action against host states for environmental regulations. Whether it be gold mining in the USA, toxics in Mexico and more, Tienhaara documents how foreign firms use IIAs to extract retribution from host states. Tienhaara's best chapter may be the one that documents how foreign firms use the potential of an investor-state claim to threaten host states into changing or ignoring environmental policy. The book paints a dirty picture of foreign firms using IIAs to circumvent domestic environmental law and therefore ‘chill’ the development of environmental governance.

The volume condenses all the background and documentation necessary for academics and policy makers to learn about the environmental interactions between policy and IIAs and to begin thinking critically about such interactions. The two main contributions of the volume are assembling all this data and the highly original documentation of the use of IIAs to threaten governments into changing policy. That said, the volume could be more developed on two fronts. First, Tienhaara could more clearly lay out the defence of IIAs with respect to the environment and confront such arguments head on. Second, the volume would be even more significant if it offered an analytical approach to thinking about the relationship between IIAs and environmental governance. Nevertheless, the book makes a fine contribution in fully documenting the existing cases and analyses their outcomes. Even if Tienharra did confront her critics more directly, her thesis would remain the same.