Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 116 Part 2.djvu/213

 PUBLIC LAW 107-210—AUG. 6, 2002 116 STAT. 995 (3) FOREIGN INVESTMENT.—Recognizing that United States law on the whole provides a high level of protection for investment, consistent with or greater than the level required by international law, the principal negotiating objectives of the United States regarding foreign investment are to reduce or eliminate artificial or trade-distorting barriers to foreign investment, while ensuring that foreign investors in the United States are not accorded greater substantive rights with respect to investment protections than United States investors in the United States, and to secure for investors important rights comparable to those that would be available under United States legal principles and practice, by— (A) reducing or eliminating exceptions to the principle of national treatment; (B) freeing the transfer of funds relating to investments; (C) reducing or eliminating performance requirements, forced technology transfers, and other unreasonable barriers to the establishment and operation of investments; (D) seeking to establish standards for expropriation and compensation for expropriation, consistent with United States legal principles and practice; (E) seeking to establish standards for fair and equitable treatment consistent with United States legal principles and practice, including the principle of due process; (F) providing meaningful procedures for resolving investment disputes; (G) seeking to improve mechanisms used to resolve disputes between an investor and a government through— (i) mechanisms to eliminate frivolous claims and to deter the filing of frivolous claims; (ii) procedures to ensure the efficient selection of arbitrators and the expeditious disposition of claims; (iii) procedures to enhance opportunities for public input into the formulation of government positions; and (iv) providing for an appellate body or similar mechanism to provide coherence to the interpretations of investment provisions in trade agreements; and (H) ensuring the fullest measure of transparency in the dispute settlement mechanism, to the extent consistent with the need to protect information that is classified or business confidential, by— (i) ensuring that all requests for dispute settlement are promptly made public; (ii) ensuring that— (I) all proceedings, submissions, findings, and decisions are promptly made public; and (II) all hearings are open to the public; and (iii) establishing a mechanism for acceptance of amicus curiae submissions from businesses, unions, and nongovernmental organizations. (4) INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.—The principal negotiating objectives of the United States regarding trade-related intellectual property are— (A) to further promote adequate and effective protection of intellectual property rights, including through—

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