TY - JOUR ID - 130750 TI - The Taking Over of a Foreign Investor’s Property by the Host State in International Petroleum Agreements: How International Arbitration Practice Responds JO - Petroleum Business Review JA - PBR LA - en SN - 2645-4726 AU - Younesi, Hamid Reza AD - Assistant Professor, LL.B; LL.M in Private Law, LL.M in International Business Law (Shahid Beheshti University of Iran); LL.M in International Oil and Gas Law & Policy (CEPMLP, University of Dundee, UK); DPhil in Law (University of York, UK); Email: hamid.r.younesi@alumni.york.ac.uk Y1 - 2021 PY - 2021 VL - 5 IS - 2 SP - 75 EP - 86 KW - International Petroleum Contracts KW - Expropriation KW - Foreign Investor KW - Host State DO - 10.22050/pbr.2021.277665.1175 N2 - The present article aims to examine the risk of host governments’ interference with the property of foreign investors (expropriation) in the petroleum industry. Host states have the police power to make regulatory changes. The “police power” is defined as the inherent and plenary power of a sovereign to make all laws necessary and proper to preserve public security, order, health, morality, and justice. It is a fundamental power essential to government, and it cannot be surrendered by the legislature or irrevocably transferred away from government. The government can interfere with the contract, change the terms, or directly take the investment. This is why international petroleum disputes and arbitration practices have addressed such risk. For this purpose, the concept of property and compensable property rights under international law are significant. Indeed, expropriation conveys a deprivation of a property owner of this property. This paper assesses the concept of expropriation, the international legal requirements for a lawful expropriation, and then analyzes the relevant international arbitral awards in petroleum jurisprudence.   UR - https://pbr.put.ac.ir/article_130750.html L1 - https://pbr.put.ac.ir/article_130750_a2fb2db5e9239cc935af28edb47b4200.pdf ER -