Hawkins Benjamin, Holden Chris
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
University of York.
J Health Polit Policy Law. 2016 Oct;41(5):969-95. doi: 10.1215/03616878-3632203. Epub 2016 Jun 2.
The importance of trade and investment agreements for health is now widely acknowledged in the literature, with much attention now focused on the impact of investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanisms. However, much of the analysis of such agreements in the health field remains largely descriptive. We theorize the implications of ISDS mechanisms for health policy by integrating the concept of global constitutionalism with veto point theory. It is argued that attempts to constitutionalize investment law, through a proliferation of International Investment Agreements (IIAs), has created a series of new veto points at which corporations may seek to block new policies aimed at protecting or enhancing public health. The multiplicity of new veto points in this global "spaghetti bowl" of IIAs creates opportunities for corporations to venue shop; that is, to exploit the agreements, and associated veto points, through which they are most likely to succeed in blocking or deterring new regulation. These concepts are illustrated with reference to two case studies of investor-state disputes involving a transnational tobacco company, but the implications of the analysis are of equal relevance for a range of other industries and health issues.
贸易和投资协定对健康的重要性如今在文献中已得到广泛认可,目前许多关注都集中在投资者与国家间争端解决(ISDS)机制的影响上。然而,健康领域对这类协定的分析大多仍主要是描述性的。我们通过将全球宪政主义概念与否决点理论相结合,从理论上探讨了ISDS机制对健康政策的影响。有人认为,通过大量国际投资协定(IIA)使投资法宪法化的尝试,产生了一系列新的否决点,企业可能会在这些点上试图阻止旨在保护或增进公众健康的新政策。在这一全球IIA“意大利面碗”中的众多新否决点为企业提供了挑选诉讼地的机会;也就是说,利用那些它们最有可能成功阻止或威慑新监管措施的协定及相关否决点。文中通过涉及一家跨国烟草公司的投资者与国家间争端的两个案例研究来说明这些概念,但分析的影响对一系列其他行业和健康问题同样具有相关性。