Jennifer Freyd, professor of psychology at the聽University of Oregon, has spent years studying the concept of institutional betrayal, including when institutions don鈥檛 help right the wrongs committed within them.
Now Professor Freyd is battling her own institution in court. She alleges that Oregon failed to properly respond to what her own department chair called a 鈥済laring鈥 pay gap between Professor Freyd and the men she works with 鈥 $18,000 (拢14,236) less than that of her male peer closest in rank.
The case聽has聽just been 聽by a federal judge who said that the pay difference was more about the kind of work the men in her department do and the retention raises that they had secured over the years. But research suggests that even these explanations are rooted in issues of gender. Professor Freyd has already filed a notice of intent to appeal.
鈥淚 was caught off guard by this outcome,鈥 she said recently of the dismissal. 鈥淏ut I鈥檒l pursue this as long as I can鈥 have a responsibility here.鈥
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And not just to herself, as Professor Freyd wrote in a court filing late last year.
鈥淎s someone who has reached a certain level of professional achievement, I feel a sense of responsibility to speak the truth of my experience,鈥 she said then. 鈥淭he pay inequity I have experienced is very painful, and I do not want the women I have mentored, my current and many former graduate students, my own daughter in graduate school, or the junior faculty we have hired in the department of psychology to go through what I鈥檝e gone through.鈥
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Oregon, meanwhile, said in a statement that Professor Freyd was 鈥渁 respected and valued鈥 member of the faculty, 鈥渁nd we believe this decision establishes that she is fairly compensated relative to her peers鈥. The university said that the court 鈥渃orrectly decided the case鈥 and will continue to defend itself on appeal.
According to Professor Freyd鈥檚 original complaint, salaries in her department are supposed to be determined by seniority and merit. Merit-based raises are awarded based on a consideration of research, teaching and service. Oregon鈥檚 psychology programme conducted a self-study in 2016. One of the findings was that psychology faced a 鈥渟ignificant equity problem with respect to salaries at the full professor level鈥. The authors conducted a regression analysis and found that the annual average difference between male and female full professors was about $25,000. So over a period of 20 years, women would receive approximately $500,000 less than their male counterparts, and probably even more, when considering retirement benefits, which are based on salaries.
The department also conducted an external review of itself. That committee of outside professors also noted the 鈥済ender disparity in faculty salaries at the full professor level鈥 and recommended that the department 鈥渃ontinue pressing for gender equity in terms of pay at the senior levels of the faculty鈥.
Both reviews traced the disparity back to retention raises given to professors who pursued outside offers. The self-study noted that this was concerning, because 鈥渋t is not obvious that the frequency of retention negotiations is a strong indicator of overall productivity鈥. Rather, it said, 鈥渢here is strong evidence of a gender bias in both the availability of outside offers and the ability to respond aggressively to such offers鈥. The outside review said it was 鈥渨idely recognized that there is a difference between the genders in terms of seeking outside offers, and if this holds at Oregon, then the bias does have a gender basis鈥.
The department sought ways to rectify the issue throughout 2016, such as by using funds available for raises.
Professor Freyd鈥檚 deans were made aware of the issue and even acknowledged that it was a problem in conversations with the department, she said. But the psychology faculty was told there was nothing to be done.
Ulrich Mayr, department chair, continued to pursue the issue. He wrote in a late 2016聽聽to Hal Sadofsky, associate dean of natural sciences in the College of Arts and Sciences, and Andrew Marcus, dean of the college, that when controlling for years in rank, the department鈥檚 male full professors earn on average $30,000 more than women. The difference is 鈥渞emarkably stable鈥 across recent years, even with major faculty departures, and doesn鈥檛 change when taking out the department鈥檚 highest-paid full professor as an outlier or when controlling for h-index (a research impact factor) or 2016 merit ratings, he said.
鈥淭his imbalance is difficult to ignore, in particular when considering lifetime cumulative effects. It is a threat to overall morale, not only among full professors, but also among early and mid-career female professors who wonder how they can escape the same fate as their senior colleagues,鈥 Professor Mayr wrote.
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While this dynamic could make it harder to offer professors strong counter offers in retention matters going forward, he said, 鈥淎ggressive retention activity should not be the only way to maintain a market-adequate salary, in particular as there are structural differences and actual biases that make it harder for women to participate in these activities.鈥 He noted that the majority of female full professors have not participated in recent retention negotiations, and that two 鈥渉ighly meritorious鈥 male full professors appear to have relatively low salaries for the same reason.
Beyond general trends, Professor Mayr urged 鈥渋mmediate鈥 action on the 鈥渕ost glaring inequity case鈥 鈥 Professor Freyd鈥檚.
鈥淔reyd is currently the most senior faculty member in the department. She is a widely recognized leader in her field with impact beyond the academy,鈥 Professor Mayr wrote. Yet her salary is 鈥$18,000 less than that of her male peer closest in rank (who is still seven years her junior). When taking in consideration impact or merit, this difference further increases to $40-50,000.鈥
Professor Mayr said that the department last reviewed Professor Freyd in 2014-15 and would have advocated giving her more than an 8聽per cent raise if he had known that was possible. Apparently he could have asked for more, he said that he learned later.
鈥淕iven the inequity she has experienced up to this point, I believe she should not be punished for my lack of information,鈥 Professor Mayr wrote, asking for a 12聽per cent raise to bring Professor Freyd鈥檚 pay to parity with the next highest-paid male full professor. 鈥淏ut even a fraction of this, say 5-6聽per cent, would help mitigate the gap and make it more realistic that we could finish the job with a future round of equity raises.鈥
Professor Freyd鈥檚 college announced raises in early 2017. She received no additional salary increase beyond the standard across-the-board and merit raises. She says that Professor Marcus and Professor Sadofsky, the deans, asked to meet with her and told her that they would not address her gender equity concerns with respect to pay. 鈥淥nly鈥 three men were paid more than she was in her department, she recalls them saying.
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There are six male full professors in her department, according to Professor Freyd鈥檚 complaint. All are junior to her in years of service, and none has a higher h-index than she has. She is paid nearly the same as a fourth male colleague who is substantially junior.
Professor Freyd sued Oregon for sex discrimination, including under the Equal Pay Act and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibit sex discrimination. She鈥檚 seeking an 鈥渁ppropriate鈥 pay raise, back pay and damages.
Professor Freyd received support from colleagues, students and other experts along the way.
鈥淚n addressing gender discrimination, you have indirectly given much to us graduate students,鈥 reads an open letter signed by dozens of graduate students. 鈥淣ot the least of which is hope. Hope for a life in which such discrimination is a thing of the past. And hope that we, in our own ways, can fight for equality in all forms for ourselves and our colleagues.鈥
Jennifer Gomez, a psychology PhD who studied under Professor Freyd, wrote in an聽聽that the lawsuit highlights Oregon as a 鈥渟hameful example of the rampant gender discrimination currently in practice across universities, including explaining away women鈥檚 lower pay through grant funding, retention efforts and tokenism.鈥
However, Michael McShane, the federal judge in Oregon who decided Professor Freyd鈥檚 case, found her claims uncompelling and sided with the university against her. Judge McShane said that unlike elementary school teachers, all professors do not in fact perform the same work, and that their pay rightfully reflects that. Put another way, equal pay for equal work only means someone when the work is mostly the same for everyone.
One of four male full professors who are paid more than Professor Freyd 鈥 Professor Mayr 鈥 was the department head who performed both financial and supervisory work, the judge said. Another served as the department鈥檚 director of clinical training and led the campus鈥 Center on Diversity and Community. And while Professor Freyd received one award of federal research funding, for $25,000, from 2008 to 2018, another full professor received 34 awards of federal funding for more than $12聽million. (Professor Freyd has still authored dozens of research articles.)
By 鈥渃hoosing to pursue optional roles, such as acting as the principal investigator of a federally funded research grant, directing a center of research, or serving as department head, full professors change their job duties and increase the amount of responsibility that their role requires,鈥 the judge wrote in his opinion. 鈥淭he university does not mandate that full professors take on these additional responsibilities, but it recognizes professors鈥 freedom to do so and to 鈥榬emake their job鈥 into what they want to do, whether through outside funding or community roles.鈥
All that aside, however, Judge McShane said that offering retention raises to faculty who are being recruited by other universities is 鈥渏ustified by business necessity鈥.
Oregon 鈥渕ust retain its faculty who are being recruited by other institutions, especially those who secure federal funding, because they help the university to maintain its status as a top-tier research institution, expand its research footprint and provide funding for the training of graduate students,鈥 he added.
Judge McShane also said that Professor Freyd has not provided 鈥渁ny specific suggestions for how to create a system in which professors would be compensated solely on the basis of their time in rank that would address retention issues鈥.
Professor Freyd cannot 鈥渉ave it both ways鈥 or 鈥渂rush aside鈥 other full professors in the department earning less while sweeping in those psychology professors making more, he said.
Again, Professor Freyd never expected the outcome, which she said reveals a misunderstanding of faculty work. She expressed concern about how the idea that professors do different work and get compensated for it differently from their peers could chill academic freedom.
Professor Mayr, the chair, agreed,聽聽sending the psychology faculty an email saying 鈥渢hat given the pay structure among full professors in our department, Jennifer deserves a higher salary鈥, and that work needs to be done toward pay equity in the department.
The lawsuit 鈥渉as no bearing on the broader question whether there are factors in society, academia and our institution that lead to gender inequities in pay, or access to other important resources鈥, he wrote. So these 鈥渙utcomes cannot be an excuse for reducing our efforts towards identifying and counteracting such factors鈥.
This is an edited version of a story聽that聽.
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