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Raelyn Campbell is the Director of Corporate Relations at NBR. |
Ms. Campbell is responsible for strengthening NBR’s ties to the corporate community by facilitating access to NBR’s network of experts and research, integrating the perspectives of the private sector into NBR’s research initiatives, and expanding the institution’s corporate support base.
Prior to joining NBR, Ms. Campbell coordinated trade and health policy initiatives for the medical technology industry vis-à-vis Asian governments as Director of Global Strategy and Analysis for the Advanced Medical Technology Association. From 1999 to 2002, she served as Senior Studies Associate and Asia Projects Manager at the Pacific Council on International Policy. Ms. Campbell worked from 1996 to 1999 as a Foreign Policy Aide to Japanese Dietmember Shozo Azuma. She served as his key advisor on regional security, international trade, and other foreign policy, defense, and economic issues. Other professional experiences include a role in the compilation of the 1995 APEC Pacific Business Forum’s overview report on regional economic developments, and a four-year position at a California-based international trade firm with extensive ties to Asia.
Ms. Campbell is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Occidental College, where she received her B.A. in diplomacy and world affairs and was awarded the Roger P. Withrow Departmental Outstanding Scholar Award. From 1995 to 1997, she completed her M.A. studies in international politics at the University of Tokyo Graduate School on a Japanese government (Monbusho) scholarship. She has studied in Japan on two other occasions: as a Rotary International Scholar at a high school in Sendai, and as a college student at Waseda University.
Ms. Campbell's interests and expertise range from regional trade, Northeast Asian security, demographics and health policy, and Japanese politics. She has published articles and been quoted on these issues in U.S., Japanese, Korean, and other media outlets. She speaks, reads, and writes Japanese fluently, and can communicate in basic Spanish.
Contact: Washington, D.C. OfficeCopyright 2008 The National Bureau of Asian Research