Lichtenstein's book is a timely publication and a welcome addition to the scholarly literature on the AIIB. This book, with its insider's view, will help readers better understand the parallels and distinctions between the AIIB and other existing MDBs. I would highly recommend this book to friends, students and professionals who are interested in the creation and development of the China-led AIIB.

Hong Yu, Senior Research Fellow, East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore, Asia Pacific Law Review

By placing the AIIB in a historical and comparative context, A Comparative Guide to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank could not have arrived at a better time.

Maria Adele Carrai, Pacific Affairs

A Comparative Guide to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank's major contribution is to provide a comparative framework of reference to understand in what ways the AIIB is different or similar to other MDBs, as it is only through comparison that one can have a better understanding.

Maria Adele Carrai, Pacific Affairs

The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) opened in 2016, as a US$100 billion multilateral development bank (MDB) financing public and private infrastructure projects for Asia. AIIB's investments in its first ten years totalled more than US$60 billion. Among its 110 approved members are countries in Asia and Oceania, Europe, Africa, and the Americas. In addition to highlighting key innovations from AIIB's first ten years in operation, the second edition of A Comparative Guide to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank examines AIIB through the lens of its Charter, focusing on its mandate, investment operations, membership, finance, governance framework and decision-making, and institutional setup. Why these elements matter for MDBs is explained, followed by analysis of the AIIB Charter text, and comparison with its predecessors. The book begins with two chapters new to the second edition and largely new to the literature. The first delves into the legal origins of the 1945 World Bank Charter, finding its roots in the Bank for International Settlements in 1930 and a bank never established, the Inter-American Bank of 1940. The second chapter traces the adaptation of the World Bank Charter through other MDB charters, in the process telling the story of AIIB's founding. Uniquely, this book takes apart the AIIB Charter for the general reader and the specialist, from the perspective of the Chief Counsel who put it together. It's an inside look at how this new international organization went from concept to reality, and a handy legal guide to MDBs, newly updated in 2025.
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Chapter 1. Beginnings Chapter 2. Legal Origins: IBRD Chapter 3. Legal Origins: From IBRD to AIIB Chapter 4. Mandate Chapter 5. Investment Operations Chapter 6. Membership Chapter 7. Finance Chapter 8. Governance: Framework Chapter 9. Governance: Decision-Making Chapter 10. Transitions Chapter 11. Institutional Matters Chapter 12. Innovations in Practice: AIIB's First Decade Chapter 13. Reflections Revisited
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"Lichtenstein's book is a timely publication and a welcome addition to the scholarly literature on the AIIB. This book, with its insider's view, will help readers better understand the parallels and distinctions between the AIIB and other existing MDBs. I would highly recommend this book to friends, students and professionals who are interested in the creation and development of the China-led AIIB." -- Hong Yu, Senior Research Fellow, East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore, Asia Pacific Law Review "By placing the AIIB in a historical and comparative context, A Comparative Guide to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank could not have arrived at a better time." -- Maria Adele Carrai, Pacific Affairs "A Comparative Guide to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank's major contribution is to provide a comparative framework of reference to understand in what ways the AIIB is different or similar to other MDBs, as it is only through comparison that one can have a better understanding." -- Maria Adele Carrai, Pacific Affairs
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Natalie Lichtenstein was Inaugural General Counsel at the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and the principal drafter for its Charter. Her prior 30-year legal career at the World Bank included lending operations in Asia and senior positions in institutional governance. At US Treasury in the 1970s, she worked on development banks and normalization of US-China relations. She taught Chinese law and remains a Fellow at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. She received an AB summa cum laude in East Asian Studies from Harvard University and a JD from Harvard Law School.
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Selling point: Written by the Chief Counsel who drafted the AIIB Charter, this guide offers insight into the legal and institutional foundations of one of the world's newest, and increasingly influential, multilateral development banks Selling point: Dissects AIIB's Charter in accessible terms, comparing it with the founding documents of other major MDBs like the World Bank, ADB, AfDB, EBRD, and IDB Selling point: Describes AIIB's mandate, membership, finance, governance, and institutional setup
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780197823088
Publisert
2026
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
798 gr
Høyde
256 mm
Bredde
188 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
344

Biografisk notat

Natalie Lichtenstein was Inaugural General Counsel at the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and the principal drafter for its Charter. Her prior 30-year legal career at the World Bank included lending operations in Asia and senior positions in institutional governance. At US Treasury in the 1970s, she worked on development banks and normalization of US-China relations. She taught Chinese law and remains a Fellow at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. She received an AB summa cum laude in East Asian Studies from Harvard University and a JD from Harvard Law School.