How I Got Here

Watching her dreams take flight

Woman standing in front of a wall holding models of airplanes

Photography by Andrew Jackson

For Christianna Scott, LLM鈥98, her role as director of diversity, equity, and inclusion at is a dream job 鈥 one that brings together several of her passions.

鈥淓ver since I went into law, I鈥檝e been passionate about human rights,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his position allows me to practise human rights from a proactive standpoint. I鈥檓 tasked with ensuring we鈥檙e as inclusive as possible.鈥 

Ms. Scott worked as senior counsel for Air Canada for 17 years before leaving to become an administrative court judge, and subsequently spent 10 months working for BNP Paribas bank before this job came up in mid-2022.

Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) officials 鈥 charged with making sure an organization is supportive of every employee鈥檚 race, ethnicity, religion, ability, gender, and sexual orientation 鈥 are relatively new, and Air Canada鈥檚 team is no different. 

鈥淚鈥檝e been given the leeway to make it what I want,鈥 says Ms. Scott. 鈥淎 lot of people think that DE&I is a bit of a fluff piece; it鈥檚 anything but.鈥 

Self-deprecating humour is an important part of how she does her job. 

鈥淲e see it all 鈥 and that鈥檚 good because if you can鈥檛 see it, you can鈥檛 address it,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y 10-person team and I have to be vulnerable about our own stories and mishaps. We鈥檒l never get perfection, and it helps to share our own mistakes, such as how we once misgendered someone. You need to talk about it openly.鈥 

Ms. Scott, who was born in Ghana, frequently shares her own experiences. She鈥檚 walked into job interviews and seen jaws drop because the interviewers didn鈥檛 expect her to be Black. 

鈥淚 give personal examples because that really is why I鈥檓 in this line of work,鈥 she says. 鈥淲ith a name like Christianna Scott, people don鈥檛 expect to see me, right? [That said,] things have changed since I was looking for a job.鈥 

Ms. Scott鈥檚 mother is Black and her father is white, but she self-identifies as a Black woman, rather than a biracial one, and explains why. 

鈥淭alking about that helps me illustrate the concept of self-identifying, its importance, how it is a personal decision, and how it can change over time,鈥 she says.

One of the initiatives she has started is a diversity, equity, and inclusion champions program for the company鈥檚 nearly 36,000 employees. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e very spread out 鈥 we鈥檙e in the air, we鈥檙e on the tarmac 鈥 so we need people who are embedded in the organization to create that loop of communication,鈥 she says. 鈥淧eople are more inclined to listen to their peers on topics of DE&I.鈥 

When they did the program callout, they had more than double the number of champion volunteers they requested so, while it鈥檚 new, it鈥檚 promising. 鈥淲e have pilots, flight attendants, ramp agents, administrators, people from France, Florida 鈥 everywhere 鈥 and we get together monthly to talk.鈥 

The challenges raised so far are self-identification and its privacy aspects.

鈥淭here鈥檚 concern about what the company will do with this data,鈥 Ms. Scott says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 understandable, but our work is only as good as our information. So, it鈥檚 helping people understand that we need a profile, not a name.鈥 

Ms. Scott says her time at Queen鈥檚 has a lot to do with her current career. Her supervisor, David Mullan, gave her 鈥渁 home away from home鈥 because she was significantly younger than the other students in the master鈥檚 program, having enrolled straight from her Bachelor of Laws. And she loved that Queen鈥檚 had a partnership with a Ghanaian university, which meant that three of the 12 students in her program were from Ghana. 

鈥淭here was this whole cultural connection that was amazing,鈥 she says of the 鈥渋ntense鈥 one-year program. 

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