Kate Miles
University of Sydney
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kate Miles.
Climate Law | 2010
Kate Miles
Climate change already regularly features in the courts. The challenges created by climate change, and the domestic and international measures designed to mitigate its effects, are generating issues over which an array of disputes are occurring.2 They are manifesting in global-scale questions of climate change causation and liability.3 Matters of administrative law have been raised in the European Union concerning the scope of governance and authority in the determination of National Allocation Plans.4 Challenges to the operation of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme5 have been filed with the European Court of Justice.6 Inter-state non-compliance procedures have been established under the Kyoto Protocol.7 The potential for conflict between international trade
Archive | 2016
Kate Miles
This article reflects upon the criticisms directed towards investor-state arbitration over the last decade. It considers the controversies, the responses and the current debates surrounding investor-state arbitration. In particular, it reviews the discourse on the right to regulate and the arguments that investment disputes can impact on matters of public interest and have the potential to encroach into host state regulatory space. It also considers concerns expressed at the structural, institutional, and procedural frameworks for investor-state arbitration. In examining both the procedural and substantive responses to such criticisms, the argument is put forward that, increasingly, there is an acknowledgement of the problematic nature of the ‘older-style’ bilateral investment treaties, that attempts are being made to address this through new emphases in treaty-drafting, and that a more nuanced approach to investment disputes may be emerging. Concerns remain, however, that even despite these developments, public welfare regulation continues to be at risk from investor challenges and that a lack of appreciation of non-investment issues persists in arbitral decision-making. For this reason, the article ultimately adopts an ambivalent view of the future impact of the changes currently occurring within the field.
Chapters | 2012
Kate Miles
This important book examines the development of soft law instruments in international investment law and the feasibility of a ‘codification’ of the present state of this field of international economic law.
Archive | 2011
Chester Brown; Kate Miles
Archive | 2013
Kate Miles
Review of European Community and International Environmental Law | 2005
Kate Miles
Archive | 2008
Kate Miles
Journal of International Arbitration | 2008
Luke R. Nottage; Kate Miles
Archive | 2011
Chester Brown; Kate Miles
Cambridge journal of international and comparative law | 2014
Kate Miles