Searching for purpose: Critical assessment of teleological interpretation of treaties in investment arbitration
Abstract
This article explores the tendency of investment tribunals to resort to teleological interpretation and
to the protection and promotion of foreign investments as a standard goal of investment treaties.
It further explores how this tendency relates to the rule of interpretation envisaged in Articles 31–33
of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties considering that the convention rule requires that
text, context, and purpose are to be equally assessed when searching for the meaning of a treaty
provision. The article’s particular focus is on whether investment tribunals have begun to create
specific rules for interpreting investment treaties that favor one of the elements of interpretation
over the others, namely, the purpose of the treaty. This method of teleological interpretation is set
against the general background of investment arbitration, the Vienna Convention on the Law of
Treaties, and cases where investment tribunals’ reliance on the preamble of the applicable treaty
was decisive for the final outcome of the case. These cases, which revolved around the goal to
protect and promote foreign investments and teleological interpretation, lend support to the
proposition that there has been a departure from the general rule. However, they equally show the
unreliability of telos in a treaty: purposes may be different, even conflicting, and their clear
meaning can easily escape interpreters. Despite a growing number of cases where the purpose of a
treaty comes to the forefront of legal reasoning, the functional correlation between the purpose of
a treaty and the legitimacy of a claim still remains unclear.
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