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Raymond Vickery

Raymond Vickery is a Senior Director of Albright Stonebridge Group, a global strategy firm, where he advises clients on India-related matters. He is widely known for his work promoting U.S.-India economic cooperation and has many years of experience advising multinational businesses on India.

Mr. Vickery’s recent experience includes work with the Coalition for Partnership with India on the successful U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Initiative, the “Bollywood-Hollywood Initiative” to fight film piracy in India, and the Coalition for Healthy India to promote U.S.-India cooperation on health.

He has served as Chair of the U.S.-India Business Council Working Group on Chemicals and Petrochemicals and has worked extensively on tariff, regulatory, and liability issues in that field.

Mr. Vickery was a Public Policy Scholar in the Asia Program of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars from 2008-2009. His Woodrow Wilson Center book project is titled “The Eagle and the Elephant: Strategic Aspects of US-India Economic Engagement.”

A past adjunct professor at George Mason University, he is the author of numerous articles on U.S.-India relations and a frequent speaker at seminars on the subject.

During the Clinton Administration, Mr. Vickery served as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Trade Development, where he was responsible for India in the Department’s Big Emerging Markets initiative.

During his tenure there, he launched the U.S.-India Commercial Alliance in conjunction with Secretary Ron Brown’s Presidential Trade Development mission to India and organized the Advocacy Center, which successfully advocated for contracts entailing billions of dollars of U.S. exports.

Mr. Vickery is a former government contracts partner in the law firm of Hogan & Hartson (now Hogan Lovells U.S., LLP). He also served three terms as an elected member of the Virginia General Assembly and in other political capacities.

Mr. Vickery was a Fulbright Scholar in South Asia and is a graduate of Duke University (Magna Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa) and the Harvard Law School.