Pamela Ann McDougallPamela Ann McDougall (9 May 1925 – 4 October 2015) was a Canadian diplomat.[1][2] McDougall attended Glebe Collegiate in Ottawa and went on to earn a Bachelor of Science degree in chemistry from Mount Allison University and a graduate degree from the University of Toronto.[3] McDougall elected not to pursue a career in chemistry, accepting, instead, a position as a grade 3 clerk in the Department of External Affairs.[3] McDougall rose through the ranks of the department, becoming a grade 1 foreign service officer in 1952.[3] In 1958 and 1959 McDougall represented Canada on the trilateral International Control Commission for Vietnam (the other members being India and Poland).[3] Her rapport with these two countries served her well in her subsequent appointments.[4] Between 1961 and 1963 she served as first secretary and later counselor at the Canadian High Commission in India.[3] In 1968, she was appointed ambassador to Poland, becoming the second Canadian woman to serve as an ambassador.[4] Her tenure in Warsaw coincided with a number of crises in the Middle East, including the Six Day War and crises in the Eastern Bloc, including the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia.[3] McDougall returned to Ottawa in 1971, joining the Privy Council as an assistant secretary.[3] In 1974, she returned to External Affairs as a bureau director general.[3] She then served as Chair of the Tariff Board from 1976 to 1979.[5] In 1979 she was appointed deputy minister the Department of National Health and Welfare by Prime Minister Joe Clark.[3] In 1980, McDougall reached the peak of her career in the civil service when Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau picked her to lead the Royal Commission on Conditions of Foreign Service.[3][6] Trudeau specifically directed McDougall to consider "the aspirations of women in Canadian society".[3] In writing her report, McDougall traveled around the world and interviewed sixty percent of the Canadian foreign service and their spouses.[3] After presenting her report in 1981, McDougall retired from public service.[3] She served for some years on the boards of Carleton University and the Royal Ottawa Hospital.[3] In 1987, she married Paul Mayer, a retired Lieutenant Colonel whom she had met in Vietnam three decades earlier.[3] References
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