Analysis of ICSID Arbitration from the Perceptive of Developing Countries

A Bittersweet Choice

  • Gizachew Silesh Chane Editor-in-Chief
  • Haile Andargie LLB, LLM, and Ph.D. Candidate (Assistant Professor in Law, Debre Markos University, Ethiopia)
Keywords: ICSID, Arbitration, Transparency, Developing countries, Consent, Ethiopia, BIT.

Abstract

There are growing concerns among developing countries on the arbitration proceeding of the International Center for Settlement of Investment Dispute (ICSID). The worries range from the transparency of arbitral proceedings; high arbitral costs; exclusion of national courts to the unsatisfactory nature of annulment proceedings. Investors' mounting claims against developing state, the link of ICSID to the World Bank, and their lack of resources to bear costs of defending against well-resourced investors make developing states to believe that they are at a comparative disadvantage compared with developed states and their investors. Although Ethiopia is not a party to the convention, many of its Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) accept ICSID jurisdiction. Thus, the main purpose of this paper is to examine the cost and benefit of ICSID in the context of developing countries. Besides, relevant BITs of Ethiopia that recognize jurisdiction of the Center are analyzed to explore the potential consequences in the event that it ratifies the ICSID. Relying on the doctrinal research methodology, the article examined the ICSID convention, scholarly research findings and the literature in the field. After due analysis, the author concluded that introducing the appellate system, ensuring transparency of the arbitration process and the publication of awards would address the concerns of developing countries. The article also argues that many of Ethiopia's BITs are inconsistent and vague with regards to submission to the jurisdiction of the Center, which implicates the need to have a model BIT.

Author Biography

Gizachew Silesh Chane, Editor-in-Chief
  • Gizachew Silesh Chane

Gizachew has earned LL.M in Maritime Law from University of Oslo (2017), LL.M in Business Law from Addis Ababa University (2010), LL.B degree from Addis Ababa University School of Law (2006), and BA degree in economics from Bahir Dar University (2015).

Gizachew is currently working as assistant professor of Business Law at Bahir Dar University, and as Consultant and attorney at Law.  With over 15 years working experience in teaching and advisory services, he has been engaged in teaching and training activities extensively. He teaches law of business organizations, corporate governance and finance, alternative dispute resolution (ADR), and Law of Financial Institutions and Markets, among others. He also advises postgraduate students in different universities of Ethiopia on their dissertation.

Specifically for the last 3 years, as of October 2019, he is serving as director of legal service directorate for technology institutes of Bahir Dar University, responsible for advising the administration human resource management, training the staff and the administration on employment issues, among others. He has also undertaken problem solving research on legal matters in collaboration with NGOs, notably with USAID Ethiopia in which he won and delivered, together with associates, two successive researches in 2021 and 2022. Gizachew has published a number of research works in various areas of law.

 

Published
2022-12-30
How to Cite
Chane, G. S., & Andargie, H. (2022). Analysis of ICSID Arbitration from the Perceptive of Developing Countries: A Bittersweet Choice. Bahir Dar University Journal of Law, 10(1), 1-26. https://doi.org/10.20372/bdujol.v10i1.1336
Section
Articles