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<p style="float:left; padding-right:10px;">[[Image:EEG.png|150px|link=|Emilie Eve Gravel headshot]]</p>
 
<p style="float:left; padding-right:10px;">[[Image:EEG.png|150px|link=|Emilie Eve Gravel headshot]]</p>
<h3>Emilie Eve Gravel, Ph.D.</h3>
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<h3>Emilie Eve Gravel</h3>
<p class="jobtitle"><strong>Senior Advisor, Canada School of Public Service</strong></p>
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<p class="jobtitle"><strong>Senior Advisor, Ph.D., GC Data Community, Canada School of Public Service</strong></p>
 
<p>Emilie Eve Gravel lives on the Traditional Unceded Territory of the Anishinaabeg peoples and serves as a Senior Advisor with the Data Community at the Canada School of Public Service. She is the founder and chair of the GC Research and Data Ethics Working Group, a community dedicated to help public servants gain the knowledge, skills, and mindsets they need to implement research and data ethics in their work. She has also taught research methods and ethics for the federal public service and at the undergraduate level at University of Ottawa. Her work with the Data Community involves fostering a thriving data culture by integrating human-centered approaches to data literacy and data talent. They previously worked as a behavioural scientist with Employment and Social Development Canada, where they conducted research on program and service modernization. They hold a Ph.D. in experimental psychology from the University of Ottawa with a focus on motivation, well-being, and culture.</p>
 
<p>Emilie Eve Gravel lives on the Traditional Unceded Territory of the Anishinaabeg peoples and serves as a Senior Advisor with the Data Community at the Canada School of Public Service. She is the founder and chair of the GC Research and Data Ethics Working Group, a community dedicated to help public servants gain the knowledge, skills, and mindsets they need to implement research and data ethics in their work. She has also taught research methods and ethics for the federal public service and at the undergraduate level at University of Ottawa. Her work with the Data Community involves fostering a thriving data culture by integrating human-centered approaches to data literacy and data talent. They previously worked as a behavioural scientist with Employment and Social Development Canada, where they conducted research on program and service modernization. They hold a Ph.D. in experimental psychology from the University of Ottawa with a focus on motivation, well-being, and culture.</p>
 
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