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Titre : Legal System Pathways to Foreign Direct Investment in the Developing World Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Hoon Lee, Auteur ; Glen Biglaiser, Auteur ; Joseph L. Staats Editeur : Foreign Policy Analysis Année de publication : 2014 Importance : 19 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Droit Tags : IDE Résumé : Building on recent works showing the role that legal institutions can play in attracting foreign capital (Jensen 2003, 2006; Li and Resnick 2003; Li 2006; Biglaiser and Staats 2010; Staats and Biglaiser 2012), and drawing on insights obtained from Powell and Rickard (2010), we use panel data for 114 developing countries from 1970 to 2007 to demonstrate that developing countries with common law legal systems attract greater foreign direct investment (FDI) than countries that have civil law or Islamic legal systems because common law systems are more inclined to promote the rule of law and protect property rights and can be understood to provide more efficiency in the law, better contract enforcement, more judicial autonomy, and more market-oriented regulations. Legal System Pathways to Foreign Direct Investment in the Developing World [document électronique] / Hoon Lee, Auteur ; Glen Biglaiser, Auteur ; Joseph L. Staats . - [S.l.] : Foreign Policy Analysis, 2014 . - 19 p.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Droit Tags : IDE Résumé : Building on recent works showing the role that legal institutions can play in attracting foreign capital (Jensen 2003, 2006; Li and Resnick 2003; Li 2006; Biglaiser and Staats 2010; Staats and Biglaiser 2012), and drawing on insights obtained from Powell and Rickard (2010), we use panel data for 114 developing countries from 1970 to 2007 to demonstrate that developing countries with common law legal systems attract greater foreign direct investment (FDI) than countries that have civil law or Islamic legal systems because common law systems are more inclined to promote the rule of law and protect property rights and can be understood to provide more efficiency in the law, better contract enforcement, more judicial autonomy, and more market-oriented regulations. Documents numériques
Legal system pathways to FDIAdobe Acrobat PDF
Titre : The North African Revolutions : A Chance to Rethink European Externalization of the Handling of Non-EU Migrant Inflows Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Mason Richey, Auteur Editeur : Foreign Policy Analysis Année de publication : 2013 Importance : 23 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Tags : Afrique du Nord Migrations Printemps Arabe Europe UE Résumé : In this paper, I discuss EU and member state externalization of the handling of non-EU, irregular migration flows. Following a historical and theoretical Introduction, I address in section “European Reactions to the Migration Flows Following the Arab Spring” the migration consequences of the 2011 North Africa revolutions, focusing particularly on how they provoked an EU migration policy crisis. Then, I show in section “Migration Policy Development in the EU: Fortress Europe or Strategic Incoherence?” how this was an outcome of the ineffectualness and strategic incoherence of EU immigration policy. This is ironic because the EU is criticized—incorrectly, I claim—for having developed a welloiled non-entre´e regime that skirts human/immigrant rights obligations by externalizing interdiction, detention, and processing of irregular migrants to countries with lower detention standards and higher human rights abuse rates. In section “The Member States’ Role in the Externalization of European Migration Policy”, I demonstrate that when such externalization policies are enacted, they are less due to EU action and more a function of member state decisions. I show that EU periphery member states are responsible for the most problematic policies partially because constraints on EU-level policy making incentivize these member states to erect “Fortress Europe” through their own devices. The North African Revolutions : A Chance to Rethink European Externalization of the Handling of Non-EU Migrant Inflows [document électronique] / Mason Richey, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Foreign Policy Analysis, 2013 . - 23 p.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Tags : Afrique du Nord Migrations Printemps Arabe Europe UE Résumé : In this paper, I discuss EU and member state externalization of the handling of non-EU, irregular migration flows. Following a historical and theoretical Introduction, I address in section “European Reactions to the Migration Flows Following the Arab Spring” the migration consequences of the 2011 North Africa revolutions, focusing particularly on how they provoked an EU migration policy crisis. Then, I show in section “Migration Policy Development in the EU: Fortress Europe or Strategic Incoherence?” how this was an outcome of the ineffectualness and strategic incoherence of EU immigration policy. This is ironic because the EU is criticized—incorrectly, I claim—for having developed a welloiled non-entre´e regime that skirts human/immigrant rights obligations by externalizing interdiction, detention, and processing of irregular migrants to countries with lower detention standards and higher human rights abuse rates. In section “The Member States’ Role in the Externalization of European Migration Policy”, I demonstrate that when such externalization policies are enacted, they are less due to EU action and more a function of member state decisions. I show that EU periphery member states are responsible for the most problematic policies partially because constraints on EU-level policy making incentivize these member states to erect “Fortress Europe” through their own devices. Documents numériques
The North-African RevolutionsAdobe Acrobat PDF