large-scale economic contracts that contain commitments that are usually included in the ILO (e.g. B a free trade agreement with an investment chapter); (2) contracts with limited investment provisions (e.g. B only those relating to the creation of investments or the free transfer of investment funds); and (3) contracts that contain only “framework clauses”, such as. B those relating to cooperation in the field of investment and/or a mandate for future negotiations on investment issues. In addition to AIIs, there is also an open category of investment-related instruments (IRIs). It includes several binding and non-binding instruments, such as model agreements and drafts, multilateral conventions on dispute settlement and arbitration rules, documents adopted by international organizations and others. IIA Mapping Project The IIA Mapping Project is a cooperative initiative between UNCTAD and universities around the world to represent the content of IIAs. The resulting database serves as a tool to understand trends in the development of the IIA, assess the prevalence of different policy approaches and identify examples of contracts. The “Mapping of IIA Content” allows you to browse the results of previous projects (the page will be updated regularly when the new results are updated). Please cite as: UNCTAD, Mapping of IIA Content, available under investmentpolicy.unctad.org/international-investment-agreements/iia-mapping For more information: Project page Mapping Project description & Methodological document The three pillars of activities • Analysis of research and policy: Monitoring trends, identifying key themes and providing cutting-edge knowledge on AI from a sustainable development perspective, • Technical assistance: implementation v on training, seminars and Ops work; conduct IIA and Model-BIT checks; Ad hoc advice to strengthen the capacity of beneficiaries to deal with the complexity of the IIA regime; • Building intergovernmental consensus: exchange and exchange of good practices and experiences to promote global investment governance. . .
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