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Reviews of Kinsella Publications
Reviews of INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT, POLITICAL RISK, AND DISPUTE RESOLUTION: A PRACTITIONER'S GUIDE (Dobbs Ferry, New York: Oceana Publications, a Division of Oxford University Press, September 2005)
- book review by Dr. Richard Happ
(litigation & arbitration department, EY Law Luther Menold in Hamburg, Germany) (German Arbitration Journal (SchiedsVZ), Issue 5/2006)
("a classical treatise. ... It is noteworthy and commendable that--unlike so many other contemporary writers--the authors try to give a
neutral and unbiased overview over diverging awards and disputed issues. ... It is a timely book. In their introduction, the authors state: 'we hope to provide the non-specialist lawyer, business person, or government official with the tools necessary to understand the international law of investment and its relationship to political risk'. They have managed to do so, and done even more. First, they successfully combined what would be three separate books (on structuring of investment, international law on investment protection and dispute settlement) in their own right. Second, they provide a coherent and--despite the necessary brevity--in-depth discussion of all relevant issues. Even minor points such as pre-dispute settlement negotiations, or the problem of pre-investment expenditures as investments, are dealt with comprehensively.... In doing so, the authors never become lost in academic debate, but always keep the perspective of the practitioner. These features make the book not only an excellent
introduction and comprehensive overview about the state of the law of investment protection,
but also a valuable reference tool for anyone experienced in the field. It is to be recommended to
anyone who wishes to gain an insight into the topics under discussion or only needs a reference guide to current law and
practice. The quality of the analysis ensures that the book will not lose its value even if the law continues to develop. For both academics and practitioners active in investment arbitration, it must be considered indispensable. .... These books [IIPR plus a casebook on foreign investment disputes] are like sea chart maps which allow the reader to navigate on the vast sea of information constituted by papers, awards and court cases during the last 100 years. Even the experienced sailor will and should not leave harbour without such sea charts.")
- Alexandre de Gramont, Crowell & Moring LLP
(I've been reading through your book International Investment, Political Risk and Dispute Resolution.
It is a remarkably helpful, well-written, and well-researched work. It is quite scholarly and at the same time a
thoroughly practical and useful guide.")
- Hew R. Dundas, ARBITRATION:
The International Journal of Arbitration, Mediation and Dispute
Management, the journal of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators ("Oh No – not another book on investment arbitration!" might be one's first response
but, if so, a wrong one; while "I couldn't put it down" is a
time-honoured publisher's cliché, it genuinely applies to this book.
The book is a collaboration between a well-known international arbitration
lawyer (Rubins) and the General Counsel (Kinsella) of AOL, the internet
services company [sic: Kinsella works for AOI, a laser manufacturer],
and therefore avoids the tendency dryness that can infect
some over-specialist academic tomes. It is in three parts (i) Assessment
and Pre-Investment Management of Political Risk (ii) The International Law
Framework of Investment Protection and Political Risk and (iii) Dispute
Resolution – these three parts total 442 pages; there are also extensive
(300 pages) appendices (see below) and a reasonably-comprehensive index
Your reviewer has approached this book wearing two main alternating hats:
first, that of an international arbitrator closely involved with the
investment arbitration world and, secondly, that of the former Head of Legal
and Group Insurance Manager (including Political Risk) of a large oil
company. So far as this book is concerned, both hats are very comfortable.
Part I is, perhaps for the specialist, sometimes a little too general but
this is reflected in the wide range of matters covered, typically in a
succinct and clear style so that even in specialist areas your reviewer
welcomed the authors' analysis since, as a minimum, it helps the reader
reassess his/her thoughts and priorities; for example, the list of
definitions (at page 34ff) of BT/BOT/BLT/BOO/BOOT/BTO is useful
clarification. The authors' analysis (page 53ff) of stabilisation clauses
proved most welcomely succinct with a clarity and precision sadly lacking in
a recent (and turgid) PhD thesis on this topic for which your reviewer was
External Examiner.
Part II changes up a gear and includes some excellent material e.g. a
thorough yet succinct section on the nationality of claims (135ff), and an
interesting analysis of arbitral decisions (250ff). Part III is, so far as
arbitration and dispute resolution are concerned, and quite properly in
context, focussed wholly on investment and other international arbitration
issues including 56 pages on procedure forming a compact and useful summary.
There is also a useful 40-page chapter on conciliation including even a
section on Med-Arb. Part III continues in that higher gear with interesting
sections on "Preliminary Treaty Concerns" (272ff), "Problem Areas" (297ff)
and "Challenge of Awards" (353ff); these were a pleasure to read.
Throughout the book, the materials are well-integrated and very much
up-to-date as subscribers to OGEMID will recognise (but note that the
authors' preface is dated August 2005 and the book published in 2005)
Too many arbitration textbooks reproduce the same materials leading to much
unnecessary duplication (the Arbitration Act 1996, ICC Rules, LCIA Rules etc
etc appear far too often). This book includes materials I do not otherwise
possess including the OPIC Contract of Insurance, the MIGA Contract of
Guarantee, even a private insurance contract and the Foreign Sovereign
Immunities Act (USA). The Washington Convention (1965), the UNCITRAL Model
Law (1985) and the UNCITRAL Rules (1976) reappear as in so many texts. Most
of these are easily available on the ICSID and UNCITRAL websites so a single
page of URLs would be a more constructive approach. Importantly, there is
an extensive and valuable list of book/article sources, such list not being
otherwise readily available; you reviewer notes for the record that he
discovered he had been cited only after completing this review !
The book reads well as regards literary style, generally easy on the eye and
not overusing jargon; key issues are generally well-explained and, perhaps,
we see the benefits of the collaboration between in-house Counsel and a
practising lawyer at the sharp edge of modern developments.
In conclusion, this book is valuable in its own right but, at a mere £90,
must be considered a bargain.)
- William W. Park, R. Gordon Butler Scholar in International Law and Professor of Law, Boston University School of Law;
General Editor, Arbitration International;
Counsel to Ropes & Gray;
former Vice-President, London Court of International Arbitration;
publications include the casebook International Commercial Arbitration;
International Chamber of Commerce Arbitration (3rd ed.); International Forum Selection;
Income Tax Treaty Arbitration; and
Arbitration of International Business Disputes: Studies in Law and Practice
("The book is a tour de force. Rubins & Kinsella have written a first-rate study of one of the
most vital areas of international law today. Notwithstanding its subtitle ("A Practitioner's Guide"),
scholars as well as practicing attorneys will find this an invaluable guide to understanding the
multifaceted adjudicatory regime for cross-border investment disputes.")
- Jack J. Coe, Jr., Professor of Law, Pepperdine University
School of Law; author, Protecting Against the Expropriation Risk in Investing Aboard (Matthew Bender 1993);
International Commercial Arbitration--American Principles and Practice (1997); NAFTA Chapter 11 Reports (with Brower and Dodge);
vice-chairman, International Commercial Arbitration Committee, ABA International Law Section ("This book is comprehensive, well-written, and balanced. An admirable mixture of learned commentary
and primary documents, it is portable, authoritative, and up-to-date. It is a distinctive and well-organized addition to
exisiting reference works and will be of great value to practioners and academics who seek a dependable,
balanced treatment of a range of legal and practical questions affecting foreign direct investment and dispute
resolution.")
- Professor Dan Sarooshi, Professor of Public International Law, University of Oxford; Barrister, London;
author of International Organizations And Their Exercise Of Sovereign Powers
and The United Nations and the Development of Collective Security: The Delegation by the UN Security Council of Its Chapter VII Powers ("This book provides an excellent account of how legal techniques can be used
to provide significant protections to foreign investment. Its comprehensive
coverage, clarity of expression, and useful appendices will prove invaluable
to the busy lawyer. It is one of those rare books that is valuable not only
for practice but also for the law classroom.")
Reviews of Protecting Foreign Investment Under International Law:
Legal Aspects of Political Risk (Dobbs Ferry, New York: Oceana Publications, 1997)
- Review/overview by Assad Omer, Transnational Corporations, vol. 10, no. 1 (UNCTAD, April 2001)
- Review by Professor William R. Slomanson, ASIL Newsletter, June 1998
- Review, The Law Book Review (Sandeep Dave, Solicitors) 1/1998
- American Soc. Int'l Law review (search for "Kinsella") [American Society of International Law: Reader’s Corner (Issue #16, June 1998)]
- T. Wälde review (CEPMLP Internet Journal, vol. 3 (1998); see also review by Assad Omer, Transnational Corporations, vol. 10, no. 1 (UNCTAD, April 2001))
- Book Review, Peter McDermott, International Trade & Bus. L. Ann. v.4
- Wash. U. Law Sch. Research Guide to International Investment Law (local copy)
- International Law course (local copy), Prof. Dr. Ring and Prof. Dr. Wolf, Freiberg University of Mining and Technology
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