Luc Juillet is the Director of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. In 2008, he was appointed the Jean-Luc Pépin Research Chair on Canadian Government and, the same year, he was awarded the President's Award for Service to the University through Media and Community Relations. ...
Luc Juillet is the Director of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. In 2008, he was appointed the Jean-Luc Pépin Research Chair on Canadian Government and, the same year, he was awarded the President's Award for Service to the University through Media and Community Relations. An expert on Canadian government and public policy, he has published research on various issues, including environmental policy, Canada-US environmental relations, government ethics, public administration reform, and problems of interdepartmental coordination. His recent book, Defending a Contested Ideal: Merit and the Public Service Commission, 1908-2008, offers a history of the principle of merit in the Canadian Public Service and the role that it played in the development of democratic government in Canada (co-authored with K. Rasmussen). He currently sits on the board of the Canadian Study of Parliament Group. In recent years, he served as a consultant for several government agencies, including Fisheries and Oceans, the Canadian International Development Agency, the Public Service Commission, and the Treasury Board Secretariat.