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Meet Our MPPs: Noémie Veilleux

While working in community organizations and policy advocacy, Noémie Veilleux ‘25, often confronted a persistent challenge of balancing immediate needs with the deeper structural causes of harm. As a licensed sexologist, her work in sexual violence prevention is rooted in a desire to create enabling environments that bridge strategic policy leadership and community organization.  

The decision to pursue an MPP was less about stepping away from her community-based work, and more about strengthening her ability to do it well. “The MPP gives you structure, theory, and skills to move from reacting to reshaping public policy,” she explains. That shift, from reaction to intentional design, has changed the way she thinks about her role in policy work. It has given her language, frameworks, and tools to think not only about how to respond in moments of crisis, but how to change the conditions that make crises so likely and so unequal in the first place. 

Having worked in non-profit organizations, think tanks, university research and as a Quebec civil servant, Noémie has always tried to bring empathy to the projects to which she has contributed. She seized the tools at her disposal to pursue a vision focused on equity and access to a fairer, more inclusive and safer living environment for all. This is also what she was aiming for when she chose to specialize in sexual and gender-based violence during her undergraduate degree. At the heart of Noémie’s work is a commitment to prevention, especially around strategies for violence, which she approaches through the lens of public health and community resilience. She is deeply interested in the affective determinants of collective choices – how emotions, relationships, and social bonds influence policy decisions– and how to use research to inform policy. This perspective inspires her belief in building stronger, more inclusive communities from the ground up. “The program has helped me reflect on my contribution in the policy landscape,” she shares, “and how I can better harness what I know and my skills to really make a difference and serve communities the way they deserve to be served.” 

One of the things that stands out about Noémie is the way she talks about community, not just as a subject of policy, but as something living, something she’s a part of. She often speaks about building community capacity “here and elsewhere,” with an openness to place-based knowledge and the idea that no one solution fits all. This sensitivity to cultural and geographic context runs through her work and gives her a rare ability to think globally while remaining grounded in people’s lives. 

For those considering the Max Bell MPP, Noémie offers honest encouragement. “If you’re trying to create system-level change and feel like your toolkit has limitations, this place is for you,” she says. “The program provides hands-on experience and learning opportunities that really strengthen your ability to address complex problems.”  

That systems-level learning moved well beyond the classroom and resulted in actual policy changes. After examining the links between sexual violence, service-related trauma, suicide prevention, and mental health challenges among veterans through her Policy Lab, Noémie was invited to speak at the House of Commons. There, she addressed the urgent need for stronger, more coordinated mental health supports and outlined what an effective mental health policy for Canadian veterans could look like. This visit led to a  on private services for veterans, where they will examine in-depth the key insights and policy recommendations from the Policy Lab report, and will listen to different voices from across the country who supported the report’s development. 

She says that a huge part of her learning happened outside the classroom: “having had access to a great mentor and engaged faculty members and guest lecturers really made the difference. It created spaces for hard yet necessary conversations on a variety of core policy challenges.” However, for her, pursuing this master’s degree is also about something deeper: finding the courage to imagine something better, and the community to help you get there. 

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