​Marking 25 years of the ICSID Review, the Fall 2010 issue (vol. 25, no. 2) is the 50th issue of the journal published by ICSID. The issue contains an article on the history and future of NAFTA Chapter Eleven by Meg Kinnear and Sergio Puig, an article by Otto Sandrock on the right of foreign investors to access German markets under Germany’s Model BIT, and a piece by Aïssatou Diop on objections to jurisdiction under Rule 41(5) of the ICSID Arbitration Rules. The issue also features a section on party-appointed arbitrators, with contributions by David J. Branson, Joseph M. Matthews and Jan Paulsson. Also included in this issue are articles by Delphine Burriez and Bart L. Smit Duijzentkunst, the two winners of the first annual ICSID Review Student Writing Competition. Fall 2010 further contains a report on the protection of foreign investment written by Wenhua Shan for the XVIII International Congress of Comparative Law, which took place July 25 – August 1, 2010 in Washington, D.C. The issue closes with two book reviews. Teresa Giovannini and Valentina Renna review L'arbitrato nel commercio e negli investimenti internazionali by Piero Bernardini, and Horacio A. Grigera Naón reviews Arbitraje de inversión by Francisco González de Cossío.

Subscribers should receive the Fall 2010 issue by mid-April. If you would like to purchase the Fall 2010 issue only, please see the ordering information below for individual issues, and remember to use promotional code ICS10FALL when placing your order.

 

Subscriptions and Purchases of Individual Issues

For those who wish to subscribe to the ICSID Review, it is available at US$90 per year for individuals (US$95 for institutions) with a mailing address in an OECD country and US$45 for individuals (US$47.50 for institutions) in non-OECD countries, plus postal charges, from Journals Publishing Division, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2715 North Charles Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21218-4363, U.S.A.; Ph: 410-516-6987; Fax: 410-516-3866; E-mail: jrnlcirc@press.jhu.edu. Subscriptions can be ordered online at http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/icsid_review. Most issues of our journal are now also available for individual purchase, depending on availability, using a credit card (by phone, fax or mail) or check/money order (by mail, and checks must be drawn on a U.S. bank and amount must be in U.S. dollars). These single issues are priced at US$54 for individual purchasers (US$57 for institutions) with a mailing address in an OECD country and US$27 for individuals ($28.50 for institutions) in non-OECD countries, plus shipping.