Biography
Jamieson Smith has served as the Chief Suspension and Debarment Officer (the “SDO”)
of the World Bank since 2017. Mr. Smith heads the World Bank’s Office of Suspension and Debarment (“OSD”), which is an independent unit within the Bank and is the first tier of the Bank’s two-tiered adjudicative sanctions system. The SDO is tasked with impartially reviewing accusations of fraud, corruption and collusion against respondent firms and individuals brought by the Bank’s Integrity Vice Presidency (“INT”). For each case, Mr. Smith determines whether there is sufficient evidence to suspend the contracting eligibility of the respondents. In deciding on cases, the SDO does not take instructions from any other person or unit.
Mr. Smith has spoken on multilateral institutions’ approach to anti-corruption at various domestic and
international conferences, including venues in Austria, Brazil, Denmark, Côte d’Ivoire, France, Italy, South
Africa, South Korea, Singapore, and the United Kingdom. Prior to his service at the Bank, Mr. Smith
was an attorney in private practice, where he represented corporations and individuals in a wide variety of
white collar criminal and regulatory matters, including alleged violations of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act. He has conducted internal investigations in China, Egypt, Indonesia, Brazil, Croatia, Italy
and Czechia, and also advised clients with respect to compliance and corporate governance issues. Mr.
Smith also teaches a course on international anti-corruption efforts as an Adjunct Professor at
Georgetown University Law Center. Mr. Smith received his A.B. from Duke University, and his J.D. from Duke University’s School of Law, where he was a member of Law & Contemporary Problems. He also earned his M.A. in American Legal History from the University of Virginia.