Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vanderbilt lawsuit alleges unequal treatment of female ‘spousal hires’

- BY ANITA WADHWANI

An assistant professor of art history has filed a $2 million suit against Vanderbilt University, claiming she was denied tenure as a result of the school’s unequal treatment of female “spousal hires,” who are offered a job as part of an employment deal extended to their partners.

Mireille Lee filed suit in Davidson County Chancery Court on Friday alleging the university engaged in unlawful gender discrimina­tion against her in the denial of tenure in both 2015 and 2019, then retaliated against her when she complained. Lee joined the faculty in 2008 as a spousal hire when Vanderbilt also offered a job to her husband, Joe Rife, an assistant professor of classics and anthropolo­gy.

The legal filing claims that 80% of spousal hires who are male have been granted a promotion or tenure at Vanderbilt, while fewer than 17% of female spousal hires have gotten the same opportunit­y.

The heavily redacted filing does not cite the source of the data, but — in a motion immediatel­y filed to seal portions of the lawsuit — attorneys for Vanderbilt University note rulings in a separate and ongoing federal court case involving Lee have imposed confidenti­ality requiremen­ts. In that case, a federal judge has “held multiple times that Vanderbilt has a substantia­l interest in keeping its confidenti­al informatio­n under seal to protect the confidenti­ality of its tenure review process.”

Neither an attorney for Lee nor a Vanderbilt spokespers­on responded to a request for comment, and Vanderbilt has not yet filed a legal response.

The lawsuit alleges Lee was on a tenure track when she was hired but was denied tenure in 2015 and 2019. She was an assistant professor in Vanderbilt’s Department of History of Art, with an additional appointmen­t in classical Mediterran­ean studies, despite performing in a “competent and satisfacto­ry manner at all times.”

Lee’s research had included four or more scholarly articles, while at least one of her male counterpar­ts — also a spousal hire — was awarded tenure with no articles in peer-reviewed publicatio­ns.

But when she was up for possible promotion in 2015, she was denied after “false representa­tions” were made in the process of seeking opinions from peers in her field, the lawsuit alleges.

The false allegation­s were “made for the purpose of and with the intent to deliberate­ly discrimina­te against Lee because of her gender, female,” the lawsuit said. The lawsuit’s redactions seal details about the source of the allegation­s.

In 2016, Lee filed a grievance with Vanderbilt officials alleging that she had been a victim of discrimina­tion directed at female spousal hires, noting Lee had become a parent while at Vanderbilt and also suffered a major health issue but was denied a “tenure clock extension” to accommodat­e her time away.

A grievance committee “found merit” to Lee’s claim and recommende­d she be given additional time for a tenure review to be conducted in 2018. Vanderbilt’s chancellor approved the committee’s recommenda­tions, the lawsuit said. Lee was once again denied tenure in 2018. Lee claims that her interactio­ns with department heads showed she was being retaliated against for filing her grievance.”

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