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This highly topical volume presents pioneering research for the purpose of developing a common analytical foundation and framework for the emerging interdisciplinary research field of investment control. Long considered as exceptional measures, restrictions on inward foreign direct investments (FDI) have become ever more common and accepted. This book presents different perspectives on how decision-makers go about the tasks of assessing risks and threats to national security that may be posed by FDI and then balancing those risks and threats against economic interests of parties concerned and society at large.
Gathers leading experts on topical and critical issues in investment screening, sanctions, and investment subsidies Provides a systematic review of the "(geo)politicization" of economic policy in the area of foreign direct investment Presents a comprehensive interdisciplinary outline of how security threats are assessed in investment screening
Auteur
Jens Hillebrand Pohl is a legal scholar, geographer, and political scientist writing and lecturing at the intersection of law and geoeconomics. An experienced attorney having practiced before U.S. federal and state courts in New York and for EU institutions, Jens researches the (geo)politicization of the legal order. His Ph.D. in law at Maastricht University concerns judicial deference to executive power in national security cases and his second Ph.D. in political science at Tampere University analyzes 'lawfare' and the (mis)use of the legal system as an instrument of geostrategic power. Jens is an adjunct professor (docent) at Maastricht University and the United Nations University, a doctoral fellow of the Institute for Globalization and International Regulation (IGIR), a doctoral research scientist at Tampere University, and an Associate Fellow at the Royal Geographical Society. He is the founding series editor of Springer Studies in Law & Geoeconomics, an advisory editor of the Yearbook of Socio-Economic Constitutions, and a former article editor of the Harvard International Law Journal. He has held visiting appointments at the Max Planck Institute for Procedural Law, T.M.C. Asser Institute, and the World Trade Institute. He holds an LL.M. from Harvard Law School and a MSc in Economics and Business from the Stockholm School of Economics.
Joanna Warchol is legal and political adviser at the Committee on International Trade (INTA) at the European Parliament since 2010. She has been responsible for legislative acts on investment protections, the EU - WTO or OECD relations, better law making as well as proceedings on the conclusion of international free trade agreements aligning to the post-Lisbon decision-making procedures. In 2018 she was a member of the EPs Inter-Institutional negotiation in the team of EP Rapporteur, Franc Proust during trialogue negotiations on the Proposal for a regulation establishing a framework forscreening of foreign direct investment into the EU (Screening of the FDI into the EU). Prior to working in INTA, she was working as a coordinating adviser between the German and Polish Delegation within the EPP Group starting from the German Presidency of the EU in 2007 with Prof. H-G. Poettering until the Polish Presidency working together with Prof. Jerzy Buzek, the first Polish President of the EP. Before joining the Parliament, she has obtained PhD in European Commercial Law at the University of Heidelberg in Germany. She was guest speaker among others: at the German University of Heidelberg, Hamburg and Bonn, in Italy at the Bocconi University in Milan, in Ferrara and in Bologna, in Austria at Vienna University of Economics and Business, as well as at University Louvain-la-Neuve in Belgium, University of Luxembourg and in Poland at Jagiellonian University in Krakow. She was as well senior fellow in frame of the DFG, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft at the Ruperto Carola Heidelberg University and in Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg.
Thomas Papadopoulos is an Assistant Professor of Business Law at the Department of Law of the University of Cyprus. He received his DPhil in Law from the Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, UK (2010). He received a degree of Magister Juris-MJur (2006) and a degree of MPhil in Law (2007) from the Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, UK. He also received his LLB with Distinction (ranked 1st) from the Department of Law, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece (2005). Previously, he was a visiting researcher at Harvard Law School, USA (2009-10). He is also a Visiting Professor at University of Trento and at International Hellenic University, a Teaching Fellow at Open University of Cyprus and an Attorney at law (Greece). Additionally, he was a Visiting Researcher at King's College London and at Max Planck Institute Luxembourg. Moreover, he is a member of the edi
Contenu
Balancing Risks: Investment Screening Mechanisms, Essential Security Definitions, and Standards of Evidence.- The Evolving Landscape of Sovereign Wealth Funds in a Changing World Economy: How Resilient are the Santiago Principles?.- Much Ado about Nothing?: State-Owned Enterprises under Foreign Investment Control in the European Union.- Protection or Protectionism? Assessing the EU's New Investment Screening Measures Against State-Driven Foreign Investment Risks.- The Concept of Security: Brief Genealogy of an Ambiguous Symbol.- Screening FDI In The EU: A Cornerstone of an Economic Security Agenda.- The National Securitization of Foreign Direct Investment: A Strategic Futures Paradigm.- Economic Perspectives on FDI and Investment Screening.- From Principal Openness Towards Reciprocity: Reorienting the Normative Foundation of the EU Investment Screening Practice in Light of Geoeconomic Competition.- Inward FDI Regulation in the UK: Closing theOpen Door?.- The EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation: The Final Piece of the Regulatory Puzzle to Ensure Competitive Neutrality in Cross-Border M&A?.- Fair Play? The Politics of Evaluating Foreign Subsidies in the European Union.