About Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD, is a member of the Law Society of Ontario. Christina worked as an editor with First Reference between 2005 and 2015 working on publications including The Human Resources Advisor (Ontario, Western and Atlantic editions), HRinfodesk, and First Reference Talks blog discussing topics in Canadian Labour and Employment Law. She continues to contribute to First Reference Talks as a regular guest blogger, where she writes on surveillance technologies, AI, and privacy law, policy, and ethics. Christina has also appeared in the Montreal AI Ethics Institute's AI Brief, International Association of Privacy Professionals’ Privacy Advisor, Tech Policy Press, and Slaw - Canada's online legal magazine. Additionally, find Christina at https://www.christinacatenacci.com/ Furthermore, Christina is a co-founder of a new AI company, voyAIge strategy. Check it out at: https://www.voyaigestrategy.com/
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High school office assistant by day, porn video star by night – she was terminated

I recently told you about the high school office assistant who was suspended with pay for making porn movies on the side—well, the school board has decided to terminate her employment.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 3 minutes read
Calendar April 13, 2011
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Women in the workplace – another take

The gap between men and women is still very significant when it comes to employees in the top ranks of the financial sector. That is, there are still very few women in senior executive roles in Canada’s financial institutions. Worse yet, there are currently no women in line for a CEO position at a big bank.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 2 minutes read
Calendar April 8, 2011
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High school office assistant by day, porn video star by night – should there be ramifications?

A Quebec school board has suspended a high school office assistant with pay after discovering she also happened to be a porn video star on the side. How did the school board find out about her extra-curricular activity? A student found out her secret and posted it on Facebook, and almost instantly, she was a high school celebrity.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 2 minutes read
Calendar April 1, 2011
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Daylight savings time: does it affect employees’ health?

Daylight savings time indicates the beginning of spring and increased energy. Turning the clock ahead one hour at this time of year provides more afternoon sunlight for outdoor exercise, which is good for one’s health. The opportunity for increased sunlight has even been linked to decreased symptoms of seasonal affective disorder and depression. But does changing the time have a negative effect on sleep and does this negatively affect employees’ health and productivity?

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 3 minutes read
Calendar March 4, 2011
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Family status – a ground of discrimination just like any other

Some recent cases make the message to employers very clear: employers cannot minimize or ignore requests for accommodation on the basis of family status. The requests must be treated in the same way as requests for accommodation based on any other protected ground in the human rights legislation.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 2 minutes read
Calendar February 4, 2011
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Gender wage gap is decreasing … but is it decreasing enough?

I just read a Statistics Canada report stating that the gender wage gap has recently been decreasing. The report briefly noted that between 1988 and 2008, the wage gap narrowed throughout the wage distribution. However, the gap shrank the most at the lowest end of the wage distribution, and the gap shrank the least at the upper end. Also, although women dramatically increased their representation in high-wage occupations such as management, there were still significant gender wage gaps within these occupations.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 4 minutes read
Calendar January 14, 2011
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Most organizations still don’t encrypt data when it leaves the office

I recently read a news release by the Alberta Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner that indicated that there are still high incidences of laptops containing personal information being stolen—without having security measures such as encryption put in place. The commissioner was left scratching his head.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 1 minutes read
Calendar December 17, 2010
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Employer performed unauthorized credit checks on employees

I recently read an investigation report from the Alberta Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner, where an employer made a big mistake and ended up violating the privacy of at least 25 employees.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 5 minutes read
Calendar December 10, 2010
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The underrepresentation of women in the workplace

I just read an interesting report about women in the workplace. Essentially, the report suggests that women remain underrepresented relative to their male counterparts, even though they form a highly educated and skilled labour pool in the market. Given the skills shortage that is expected to occur in the near future due to mass retirements of senior baby boomer workers, this is an unsettling finding. But why is this happening?

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Time to read 3 minutes read
Calendar October 22, 2010