Investment Arbitration - Chapter 8 - Mandatory Rules in International Arbitration
Andrea K. Bjorklund, Professor of Law, University of California, Davis, School of Law.
Originally from Mandatory Rules in International Arbitration
I. INTRODUCTION
Do mandatory rules play any role at all in investment arbitration? Pierre Mayer defines mandatory law as “an imperative provision of law which must be applied to an international relationship irrespective of the law that governs that relationship.”1 Under that definition, an investment arbitration would appear not to give rise to the application of mandatory law. Investment treaty arbitrations are typically governed by international law, whether that law takes the form of treaty terms or customary international law as incorporated by the treaty. As Donald Donovan notes, the applicable legal system – international law – itself establishes the hierarchy of rules by which competing norms will apply.2 Moreover, international law is made by States and, aside from jus cogens norms, can be changed by States. Thus, so long as the treaty provisions do not violate a jus cogens norm – an unlikely contingency – a tribunal need consider no other law: the treaty provisions, as lex specialis, would trump other conflicting sources of international law.
If municipal law were to play a role in a particular investment arbitration, even a mandatory municipal law should not displace the international law made applicable by the investment treaty. Indeed, it is axiomatic that a State may not invoke an inconsistent domestic law to justify its failure to abide by its international obligations.4 One can say that the very purpose of an investment treaty is to guard against a host State’s use of its sovereign authority to enact or change municipal law in a manner that violates international law and works to the detriment of a foreign investor.
In other words, in an investment treaty arbitration it seems there is no need for arbitrators to decide whether or not to displace chosen law to make way for mandatory rules. The States party to the treaty have themselves identified which law trumps; as lawmakers they have the authority to jettison laws with which private parties might not be able to dispense.