'We feel that we really have to prove ourselves' as women in non-traditional roles, says Sen. Diane Griffin
Senator reflects on her groundbreaking career in biology, land conservation for International Women's Day
Sen. Diane Griffin will be one of the guest speakers at the P.E.I. Business Women's Association's International Women's Day event Monday, and will reflect on her groundbreaking career in land conservation and politics.
The association is hosting the virtual event to celebrate International Women's Day, an annual opportunity to celebrate women's achievements and consider ways to achieve gender equality, and this year's theme globally is "choosing to challenge."
Griffin served in several high-profile roles dedicated to land conservation in her career, including director of the Island Nature Trust and P.E.I. program director for the Nature Conservancy of Canada. She was also a deputy minister of Fisheries and Environment in P.E.I. — all in a time when few women were in these roles.
"At one point it was a man's game, primarily," said Griffin in an interview with Island Morning host Mitch Cormier.
"A lot of land conservation efforts came out of the anglers and hunters organizations and from groups like Ducks Unlimited, so those were primarily male-oriented organizations. But things changed in the early 1970s as more women went into biology and got university teaching positions and got into management."
'We've come a long way'
Griffin said it was an exciting time to be a woman heading up any organization.
"At the time you've got to realize, we had no women in the P.E.I. Legislature," Griffin said, and only one woman in the federal cabinet.
I don't think they have it easier, I just think it's different.