Vikram
Raghavan is senior counsel in the World Bank's Legal
Vice-Presidency, where he works in two different practice
groups. As a member of the East Asia and South Asia group,
Vikram is "country lawyer" for the World Bank's operations in
India and Myanmar, and Korea. In that capacity, he provides
legal and transactional advice on a variety of constitutional,
operational, and local law issues that arise in World
Bank-financed projects in those areas. Previously, Vikram
worked as country lawyer for World Bank portfolios in Sri Lanka,
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan. Most
recently, he focused on Iraq, Iran, and the West Bank and Gaza.
In the Operations Policy practice group, Vikram's
responsibilities include handling various legal and policy
issues affecting post-conflict areas and fragile states. He
serves on the World Bank's Post Conflict Fund Committee. He
also provides legal advice regarding development policy
operations (formerly called structural adjustment operations)
and breach-of-governmental-contract questions.
Before joining the World Bank in 2001, Vikram was an associate
in the New York office of O'Melveny & Myers. There, he worked
on several transactional, litigation, and
international-arbitration matters. Vikram is a graduate of the
National Law School of India in Bangalore, and he obtained his
masters in international law from NYU Law School. He is
admitted to practice law in the State of New York. He is the
author of a legal treatise -- Communications Law in India: Legal
Aspects of Telecom, Broadcasting, and Cable Services (LexisNexis
2006). He is presently working on a book about the drafting and
adoption of the Indian constitution and the founding of modern
India. He and his friends have to together created a blog on
Indian law and legal developments:
www.lawandotherthings.blogspot.com.

