Heim v. Daniel
Citation81 F.4th 212
Date Filed2023-08-30
Docket22-1135
Cited17 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
22-1135-cv
Heim v. Daniel
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2022
Argued: June 30, 2023 Decided: August 30, 2023
Docket No. 22-1135-cv
JOHN J. HEIM,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
â v. â
BETTY DANIEL, ADRIAN MASTERS,
Defendants-Appellees.*
Before:
LYNCH, BIANCO, and PĂREZ, Circuit Judges.
This appeal concerns a First Amendment retaliation claim brought in the
*
The Clerk is respectfully directed to amend the caption to conform to the above.
Northern District of New York by Plaintiff-Appellant John Heim, an adjunct
professor of economics at SUNY Albany, who attributes his failure to advance
within his department to his colleaguesâ unfavorable view of the methodology he
employs in his scholarship. The district court (Hurd, J.) granted summary
judgment to Defendants, two of Heimâs colleagues who were involved in the
hiring decisions at issue. Although we disagree with much of the district courtâs
reasoning, we nonetheless agree with its ultimate disposition. We hold that
Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410(2006), does not apply to speech related to academic scholarship or teaching, and that Heimâs speech addressed matters of public concern, but that Heimâs First Amendment claim nonetheless fails because under Pickering v. Bd. of Educ.,391 U.S. 563
(1968), a public universityâs interest in
deciding for itself what skills, expertise, and academic perspectives it wishes to
prioritize in its hiring and staffing decisions outweighs Heimâs asserted interest
in competing for academic positions unencumbered by university decision-
makersâ assessment of his academic speech. We therefore AFFIRM the judgment
of the district court.
PHILLIP G. STECK, Cooper Erving & Savage LLP, Albany, NY,
for Plaintiff-Appellant.
SARAH L. ROSENBLUTH, Assistant Solicitor General, Buffalo, NY
(Letitia James, Attorney General; Barbara D.
Underwood, Solicitor General; Andrea Oser, Deputy
Solicitor General, on the brief), for Defendants-Appellees.
DARPANA M. SHETH, Washington, DC, for Amicus Curiae
Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.
2
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellant John Heim, an adjunct professor of economics, appeals
from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of
New York (David N. Hurd, J.) granting summary judgment to his colleagues
Betty Daniel and Adrian Masters (together, âDefendantsâ) who, as the relevant
decision-makers in the Economics Department at the State University of New
York at Albany (âSUNY Albanyâ1), declined to interview Heim for more
desirable positions he believes he was qualified for. Heimâs challenge is premised
on the allegation that Defendants rejected his candidacy in substantial part
because he is a proponent of traditional Keynesian economics, an approach that
Defendants consider to be outdated.
Although we accept that factual premise underlying Heimâs appeal, we
disagree with the legal theory it supports: that, under the First Amendment, a
public universityâs hiring decisions cannot be informed by methodological
preference. Rather, applying the employer/employee interest-balancing
framework first set forth in Pickering v. Bd. of Educ., 391 U.S. 563 (1968), we hold
1
The institution is also referred to in the record as âThe University at Albanyâ
and, simply, âAlbany.â
3
that a public universityâs interest in deciding for itself what skills, expertise, and
academic perspectives it wishes to prioritize in its hiring and staffing decisions
outweighs Heimâs asserted interest in competing for academic positions
unencumbered by university decision-makersâ assessment of the approach or
methodology underlying his academic speech. We therefore AFFIRM the
judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
The following facts, which are largely drawn from Heimâs own testimony,
are undisputed except where otherwise indicated, and are those that a reasonable
factfinder could find, construing all ambiguities in Heimâs favor. See Cugini v.
City of New York, 941 F.3d 604, 608 (2d Cir. 2019).
A. The Parties
Heim, an adjunct professor2 at SUNY Albany, initially brought this lawsuit
against the entire SUNY system, SUNY Albany, its president Havidan Rodriguez,
2
In his deposition, Heim explained that although his title was technically
âvisiting professor,â for âpayroll purposesâ he was âknown as an adjunct
professor or lecturer.â Appâx 142, 151. All parties refer to him as an âadjunct.â
4
and two members of the SUNY Albany Economics Department (the
âDepartmentâ): Professors Betty Daniel and Adrian Masters. Masters has chaired
the Department since 2015, and was a member of its hiring committee at all
relevant times. In addition to leading the Department prior to Masters, Daniel
also chaired its hiring committee at all relevant times.
B. Heimâs Professional Path
Heim was a relative latecomer to academia. After receiving his Ph.D. in
Political Economy from SUNY Albany in 1972, he worked in government as an
econometrician (and in other similar capacities) for many years, interrupted only
by his time in the mid-1980s obtaining a Masterâs degree in Public
Administration from Harvard. He began his teaching career in 1997, accepting a
non-tenured position at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (âRPIâ) where he
eventually achieved the rank of (non-tenured) âfull clinical professor.â Appâx
126.3 Heimâs duties at RPI âwere limited to teaching and administration,â
including teaching âMaster[âs] and Ph.D.-level Advanced Macroeconomics I & II
and Masterâs level Econometricsâ and supervising both undergraduate- and
3
Because â[t]enure in that position was not available,â RPI never made any
âdecision on granting or denying [Heim] tenure.â Appâx 528.
5
graduate-level research. Id. at 528.
Around 2012, he accepted an adjunct position at SUNY Albany with a
lighter teaching load that he felt would allow him to âconcentrate more on
research.â Id. That research, the methodology it employs, and the difference
between that methodology and the approach favored by his colleagues at SUNY
Albany are at the root of this dispute.
C. Methodological Perspectives at SUNY Albany
Heim describes himself as a traditional Keynesian economist. In Heimâs
characterization, Keynesians âstud[y] the operation of the entire economy as a
whole (in comparison to microeconomists who study the behavior of firms or
sectors of the economy or particular markets),â with a particular focus on
demand-driven government intervention. Appellantâs Br. 8. That perspective, he
explains, derives from prominent 20th-century economist John Maynard Keynesâs
view that â[w]hen consumers spend money in the economy, businesses respond
by producing goods and servicesâ to satisfy that robust aggregate demand,
stimulating the macroeconomy; conversely, âwhen aggregate demand is lacking,
the economy is depressed.â Id. For example, â[f]or Keynes, the Great Depression
was caused by insufficient aggregate demand, that is[,] consumers having
6
insufficient purchasing power to drive the economy forward.â Id. Accordingly,
Keynesian economics generally supports countering economic lulls with
government intervention targeted at increasing consumersâ purchasing power
through policies like tax cuts, heightened government spending, and increases in
the money supply. That view represented a significant departure from prevailing
early 20th-century perspectives, which effectively trusted to market forces to sort
everything out in the long run. Keynes, of course, famously quipped that â[i]n the
long run, we are all dead,â Appâx 531, and the school of economics he founded
enjoyed a run of prominence spanning several post-Great Depression decades.
Rampant stagflation in the 1970s inspired many economists to re-evaluate.
When traditional Keynesian methods were seen as unable to account for the
oppressive mix of inflation, unemployment, and stagnant growth of the era, new
approaches began to supplant Keynesianism. That reckoning was spurred by the
so-called âLucas Critique,â4 which posited that Keynesian modelsâ reliance on
fixed coefficients to relate consumersâ disposable income to consumer spending
did not account for the fact that consumersâ behaviors may vary based on their
4
Named for its creator, University of Chicago economist and Nobel laureate
Robert Lucas.
7
expectations for future government interventions â for example, by responding to
a short-term tax cut aimed at increasing consumer purchasing power by instead
saving newfound disposable income that Keynesian models would expect them
(and policymakers would prefer them) to spend. That critique demanded a new
way to predict macro, economy-wide, trends based on those kinds of micro,
consumer-level, variables. So was born the âmicro foundations of
macroeconomicsâ school which, in Heimâs words, attempts to âextrapolate the
behavior of the macro economy from the micro economy.â Id.
One prominent technique employed under that banner, and by many post-
Lucas Critique macroeconomists, is central to this lawsuit: âdynamic stochastic
general equilibriumâ (or âDSGEâ) modeling. Heim characterizes DSGE as âa
method that uses sophisticated mathematics such as logarithms to derive the
behavior of the macro economy from the micro economy.â Id. at 532. DSGEâs
proponents consider it a more flexible and robust technique than its forebears.
They believe that by permitting macroeconomic indicators like economic output
to be linked to coefficients that are sensitive to consumer expectations,
researchers are able to model economic trends more dynamically and more
realistically than would be possible using traditional Keynesian tools. To Heim,
8
though, none of this is really macroeconomics at all because it does not âdeal
with the behavior of the economy as a whole.â Id. at 535. In his view, âyou cannot
simply derive the macro from the micro.â Id.
The merits of that debate5 are not for us to assess; judges are neither
qualified nor commissioned to resolve academic debates among scholars in any
particular discipline. What matters is that the debate exists at all, and that Heim
â who practices traditional Keynesian economics6 â is on one side of it, while his
colleagues at SUNY Albany â who do not â are on the other.
D. Heimâs Work at SUNY Albany
According to Heim, it did not take long for his colleaguesâ âhostil[ity]â
5
The parties, for example, dispute the extent to which Heimâs approach is or is
not out-of-step and antiquated, precisely how ubiquitous and/or infallible the
DSGE technique is or is not, and whether DSGE has invited a reversion to pre-
Keynesian perspectives or is simply a technique used by modern economists of
varying perspectives. Compare Appellantâs Br. 9 (âDSGE economists are said to be
a modern version of neoclassical economists, the economists who emphasized
market clearing before the advent of Keynes.â), with Appelleeâs Br. 8
(âContemporary Keynesian analysis . . . often embraces DSGE techniques â it
does not, as plaintiff claims, stand apart from DSGE.â).
6
Heim describes his own work as âdemand-driven Keynesianism, as Keynes
himself would have recognized it,â employing a âhighly detailed statistically
based look at how the economy operates.â Appâx 535.
9
towards his approach to affect the scope of his work within the Department.
Appâx 552. In his first semester at SUNY Albany, he taught a class on large-scale
macroeconomic modeling. When Daniel took over as Chair, however, âshe denied
[Heim] the opportunity to continue teaching that class.â Id. at 528. Thereafter,
although Heim maintained a full courseload teaching classes like âPrinciples of
Economicsâ and âEconomic Statistics,â he was never again assigned to teach
macroeconomics.
Meanwhile, Heim continued to forge ahead with his research, although as
an adjunct he was not required to do so. For example, between 2017 and 2021 he
published four books studying âevery fiscal stimulus program going back to
1960,â id. at 529, and as of February 2022, he had published 23 articles in
economic journals. His research was publicized and celebrated by the university,
including at a 2018 reception honoring several dozen âAuthors & Artistsâ from
across the College of Arts and Sciences, and a 2018 âCelebration of Scholarshipâ
event featuring presentations from 45 SUNY Albany scholars across a range of
disciplines. Id. at 573, 575.
Heim remains employed as an adjunct at SUNY Albany. That is not
because he always wanted to continue in that capacity, however. To the contrary,
10
at the heart of this lawsuit are three other positions in the Department that he
was (or would have been) interested in, but for which he was never interviewed.
1. The 2013 Position
First, in December 2013, Heim learned of a tenure-track macroeconomics
opening that the Department was in the process of filling. That was not an
everyday occurrence; the Department is small, employing fewer than 20 faculty,
only three or four of whom specialize in macroeconomics. Heim quickly reached
out to Daniel by email to express his interest:
I just found out last Friday at our holiday party that we
were recruiting for a macroeconomics/Money and
banking position. No one had mentioned this to me
before, and I would have been interested in applying,
had I known . . . .
That said, my research interests are principally in large
scale econometric modeling of the macroeconomy. . . . I
am finalizing this year work on a 30-40 equation model
of the macroeconomy, which could become known as
the âSUNY Albany Econometric Modelâ . . . . I think my
area of my research is likely to undergo a resurgence of
interest in the near future[.]
Of course, the department here at SUNY has already
made a substantial investment in developing a micro
foundations focus, and may be more interested in
adding depth to its capacity in this area. Though I have
taught graduate-level micro foundations courses, it is of
course, an area substantially different from my own area
11
of interest and expertise. If this is the direction the
department sees itself headed in, certainly someone far
different than me would a better match for the
department and its plans than I would be.
Id. at 588-89. In response, Daniel confirmed that the Department was indeed
looking for someone with a micro foundations focus, but that it nonetheless
supported Heimâs ongoing, divergent research:
Thanks for your interest in the macro position. You are
correct that we are heavily invested in micro
foundations of macro as this is the research trend in the
top macro and general field journals. Since we expect
our faculty to publish in these journals, we do intend to
continue with this direction.
I did consult with Adrian [Masters] . . . and we agree
with you that your research differs from the course of
research we want to pursue. I expect that we will hire a
junior person recently trained in these techniques. I do
want to encourage you to continue your research. It just
does not match with the direction we are taking macro
research in the Department.
Id. at 588. The Department ultimately hired Yue Li, a recent Ph.D. with a micro
foundations research focus who, in Heimâs estimation, had limited familiarity
with traditional Keynesian modeling.
2. The 2016 Position
A few years later, in 2016, Heim learned that the Department had hired for
12
a full-time (non-tenure-track) lecturer position in financial economics â and that
despite Heimâs background in that area, he had again never been approached
about the opportunity, and in fact did not even learn of it until the job had
already been filled by a fellow adjunct; the Department had sought and obtained
a waiver from the university to make the offer to Lewis Segal, a former Goldman
Sachs employee with a Ph.D. in economics from Northwestern, without going
through the normal competitive hiring process. Although he concedes that Segal
was qualified for the role, Heim maintains that he himself was âequally qualified,
maybe a little bit more.â Id. at 199.
3. The 2017 Position
In August 2017, while having lunch with Daniel and Masters, Heim
learned of another open tenure-track macroeconomics position in the
Department. In October, he applied. But apart from an initial confirmation email
from the university that his application had been received, several weeks passed
without any response. Finally, in December, Heim followed up with Masters
(now Chair of the Department) who told Heim that he was not being considered
because his recommendations had not been received in time. The mix-up was
apparently attributable to a technical snafu at the third-party online system
13
responsible for compiling application materials, leaving a frustrated Heim to
wonder why no one had ever reached out to him about the missing documents
even though it was widely known within the Department that he was applying.
But all of that was a âred herringâ anyway. Id. at 542. Eventually, after
being pressed for further explanation by Heim, Masters put the âreal reason,â id.,
in an email:
The department respects you and respects the fact that
you continue to conduct your research as an adjunct
professor. The technical reason we put down for not
interviewing you is that we did not have letters and I
told you that at the party. At the party I also gave you
the âCliff Notesâ on the general feeling of the committee
towards your application. Until now I have not given
you chapter and verse because I am still happy to have
you as a member of the department but you have now
forced my hand on this. The fact is the committee did
discuss your application and, as with many applicants
with a track record, concluded that regardless of what
any letters said we would not interview you for the
position. Here is why:
We are looking for someone who:
1. Can teach and train students to conduct research in
the modern (i.e. post Lucas Critique)
macroeconomics that by your own admission
everyone else but you and Ray Fair do[es]. Nothing
in your credentials supports that possibility.
2. Has a reasonable expectation of making tenure
within the department within the 6 year tenure track
14
window. Here again the fact that you have a record
speaks for itself. Nothing a letter writer can do can
change that. The journals in which you have
published do not achieve the standard that we expect
for tenure. (Typically 4 articles in journals at the level
of top field e.g. Journal of Monetary Economics or the
International Economic Review.[)]
3. Has sufficient synergies with our research agendas
that we can learn from them and them from us with
the possibility of constructive collaboration. Your
work is not consistent with that expectation. Indeed,
we rejected a number of applications that met the
first 2 criteria above but they do New Keynesian
macro that we do not appreciate.
I hope you are not too discouraged by this and continue
to teach and do your work within the department as an
adjunct professor but the fact is that you will not be
hired for this job.
Id. at 597-98. Heim asked Masters to reconsider, ânoting that DSGE economics
had come under heavy criticism within the professionâ including from two
prominent economists, and urging that the Department would âbenefit from
having a recognized alternative, or at least by having a healthy debate on these
issues in economics.â Id. at 545. Masters responded by simply dismissing those
prominent critics as âold guys!â Id. The Department ultimately hired Ben Griffy, a
recent Ph.D. whose research, like Mastersâs, focused in part on macroeconomics
and the labor market and who Heim believes also had limited familiarity with
15
traditional Keynesian methods.
II. Procedural Background
A. Early Proceedings
Heim filed this lawsuit in July 2018, initially asserting three causes of
action: (1) a claim for damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Daniel and
Masters for âviolat[ing] plaintiffâs right of freedom of speech while acting under
color ofâ state law; (2) a claim pursuant to § 1983 for injunctive relief against
SUNY Albany President Rodriguez in the form of a court order to âprevent
ongoing discrimination against Keynesian economistsâ in violation of the First
Amendment; and (3) an age discrimination claim under New York Stateâs Human
Rights Law. Appâx 64-67.7
In September 2018, Defendants moved to dismiss the Complaint, and in a
ruling from the bench, the district court granted that motion in part, dismissing
the second and third causes of action. Along the way, Heim abandoned any claim
7
The Complaint also foreshadowed that â[u]pon issuance of a right to sue letter
by [the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission],â Heim would seek
leave to add an age discrimination claim under the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act. Appâx 67. That never happened, and the district court therefore
âdecline[d] to consider any claim under the ADEA.â Heim v. Daniel, No.
1:18-CV-836, 2022 WL 1472878, at *1 n.2 (N.D.N.Y. May 10, 2022). Heim does not
challenge that decision on appeal.
16
against President Rodriguez, SUNY Albany, and the broader SUNY system,
opting to pursue only the First Amendment retaliation claim against Daniel and
Masters. Heim does not challenge any of that on appeal.
B. Summary Judgment
His appeal targets what happened next. After the parties exchanged
discovery on Heimâs sole remaining claim â First Amendment retaliation â
Defendants moved for summary judgment in January 2022.
In May 2022, the district court granted that motion and entered judgment
for Defendants, holding in relevant part that the First Amendment did not
insulate Heimâs academic speech from adverse action by his public university
employer. Heim v. Daniel, No. 1:18-CV-836, 2022 WL 1472878, at *14 (N.D.N.Y. May 10, 2022). It arrived at that conclusion applying two separate First Amendment frameworks in the alternative and reaching the same result under both, reasoning (1) that academic research and writing are part of a public university professorâs âofficial duties,â dooming Heimâs claims under Garcetti v. Ceballos,547 U.S. 410, 421
(2006); and (2) that even if Garcetti did not apply,
Heimâs âcomplex statistical modeling intended for consumption by a relatively
narrow audienceâ did not address any matter of public concern, warranting
17
dismissal under Pickering. Heim, 2022 WL 1472878, at *14. The court also offered yet another alternative basis for its ruling: that because Heim did not meet the hiring committeeâs stated qualifications for the position, âa reasonable jury would be compelled to conclude that defendants would not have promoted plaintiff . . . regardless of plaintiffâs protected speech.âId. at *16
.8
DISCUSSION
Heim challenges each of those points on appeal. He contends that the
district court erred by, among other things, (1) misconstruing the role that Heimâs
Keynesian viewpoints played in his colleaguesâ hiring decisions; (2) applying
Garcetti to academic speech at all; (3) concluding, under Pickering, that Heimâs
speech did not address any matter of public concern; and (4) failing to properly
âbalance the employeeâs First Amendment interests against the employerâs
8
The court also (1) concluded âthat to the extent Heimâs § 1983 claim is based on
the general First Amendment right of âacademic freedom,â that claim must be
dismissed, Heim, 2022 WL 1472878, at *7; (2) rejected Heimâs argument that this case should be analyzed under a âlimited public forumâ analysis,id. at *17
(adding that ââforumsâ are places, not peopleâ); and (3) remarked that although its conclusions as to the merits made it âunnecessaryâ to address qualified immunity, that defense âalmost certainly appliesâ to Defendantsâ conduct in this case,id.
at *16 n.14. Heim does not challenge any of that on appeal, and because
we resolve the sole claim he continues to press on other grounds, we have no
occasion to express any view as to the merits of those observations.
18
legitimate interests.â Appellantâs Br. 49.
Heimâs arguments are not altogether without merit. Although we affirm
the district courtâs ultimate disposition, we disagree with much of its reasoning.
In particular, we disagree with its conclusions that Heimâs speech did not
substantially motivate Defendantsâ rejection of his candidacy, and that Heimâs
speech did not address matters of public concern. We also join several other
Circuits in recognizing that First Amendment retaliation claims founded upon
speech that relates to academic scholarship or teaching are properly evaluated
under Pickeringâs employer/employee interest-balancing framework irrespective
of whether, under Garcetti, that speech was part of an employeeâs official duties.
Ultimately, though, because Heimâs First Amendment retaliation claim cannot
withstand that balancing test, it nonetheless fails.
I. Legal Standards
A. Standard of Review
We review a district courtâs grant of summary judgment de novo, âresolving
all ambiguities and drawing all reasonable inferencesâ in favor of the
non-movant. Woolf v. Strada, 949 F.3d 89, 92-93 (2d Cir. 2020) (internal quotation
marks omitted). We affirm âonly if there is no genuine issue of material fact and
19
the prevailing party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Harris v. Miller,
818 F.3d 49, 57 (2d Cir. 2016) (internal quotation marks omitted).
B. First Amendment Retaliation
To establish a prima facie First Amendment retaliation claim, a plaintiff
must show (1) âthat the speech or conduct at issue was protectedâ from the
particular retaliatory act alleged; (2) that the retaliatory act qualifies as an
âadverse action [taken] against the plaintiffâ; and (3) âthat there was a causal
connection between the protected speech and the adverse action.â Shara v.
Maine-Endwell Cent. Sch. Dist., 46 F.4th 77, 82(2d Cir. 2022) (internal quotation marks omitted). However, â[e]ven if the plaintiff makes out a prima facie retaliation claim, a government defendant may still receive summary judgment if it establishes its entitlement to a relevant defense.â Anemone v. Metro. Transp. Auth.,629 F.3d 97, 114
(2d Cir. 2011).
The district court held, and Defendants do not dispute on appeal, that the
Departmentâs refusal to hire Heim for the 2017 position qualifies as an adverse
action.9 We therefore address below only the other, contested, elements of a First
9
Nor, for the most part, could Defendants dispute that point. âIn a First
Amendment retaliation case, a government employerâs response to speech
20
Amendment retaliation claim.
constitutes an adverse action if it would deter a similarly situated individual of
ordinary firmness from exercising his or her constitutional rights.â Connelly v.
County of Rockland, 61 F.4th 322, 325(2d Cir. 2023) (internal quotation marks omitted). This is a less âdemandingâ (that is, easier to satisfy) standard than the âmaterially adverse change in the terms and conditions of employmentâ test that we use to determine an âadverse actionâ in other employment contexts. E.g., Zelnik v. Fashion Inst. of Tech.,464 F.3d 217
, 225 (2d Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). For purposes of First Amendment retaliation, an adverse action may include, among other things, âdischarging, . . . demoting, reducing the pay, or reprimanding an employeeâ and, as especially relevant here, both ârefusing to hireâ and ârefusing to promoteâ an applicant. Montero v. City of Yonkers,890 F.3d 386, 401
(2d Cir. 2018). Whether the 2017 decision not to interview Heim is better
understood as a refusal to promote â a characterization Defendants have
questioned, see Appâx 872 (Daniel testifying: âThe position of adjunct does not
have the concept of promotion. An adjunct is a dead-end position. . . . The
assistant professor position is a completely different position.â) â or a refusal to
hire, it indisputably satisfies the âadverse actionâ requirement.
The earlier acts of alleged retaliation present closer questions. The district
court held that the circumstances surrounding the 2013 and 2016 hires did not
amount to âsufficiently adverse actions,â emphasizing that Heim did not actually
apply for either position, and brushing aside Heimâs arguments that âDaniel
should not have discouraged him from applyingâ in 2013 and that the
Department had âfollowed an improper internal or administrative processâ in
2016. Heim, 2022 WL 1472878, at *14. Because we reject Heimâs claim for other reasons, we need not decide whether those conclusions (which Heim does not challenge on appeal) faithfully reflect our permissive and fact-specific âadversityâ standards in this context. See Hoyt v. Andreucci,433 F.3d 320, 328
(2d Cir. 2006)
(noting that âlesser actions may meet the adversity thresholdâ under what is âa
heavily fact-specific, contextual determinationâ).
21
II. Causation
We begin with the causation requirement. To show causation, âa plaintiff
must show that the protected speech was a substantial motivating factor in the
adverse employment action.â Smith v. County of Suffolk, 776 F.3d 114, 118(2d Cir. 2015) (internal quotation marks omitted). Nevertheless, â[b]ecause protected speech could not substantially cause an adverse action if the employer would have taken that action in any event, a defendant can rebut a prima facie showing of retaliation by demonstrating by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have taken the same adverse employment action even in the absence of the protected conduct.â Nagle v. Marron,663 F.3d 100, 111-12
(2d Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted), citing Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle,429 U.S. 274, 285-86
(1977) (âThe constitutional principle at stake is sufficiently
vindicated if such an employee is placed in no worse a position than if he had not
engaged in the conduct.â).
With those principles in mind, Defendants insist that they âwould have
declined to interview plaintiff even in the absence of any hostility to his allegedly
protected speech because he was not qualified for the position.â Appelleesâ Br. 25.
The centerpiece of their argument is that Heim lacked any of the qualifications
22
articulated in Mastersâs December 2017 email, which they characterize as: (1) âan
ability to teach and train students in contemporary research techniquesâ; (2) âa
research agenda that would permit collaboration with the Departmentâs other
faculty membersâ; and (3) âa publication record suggesting a strong likelihood of
receiving tenure.â Id. at 15-16.
But any attempt to construe those three requirements as content-neutral
cannot survive even a superficial look at Mastersâs actual email. Justifiably or not,
the requirements were soaked in hostility to Keynesianism. At the outset, when
describing the requisite ability to teach and train students in contemporary
research, Masters explicitly defined âmodernâ as the sort of âpost Lucas
Critique[] macroeconomics that by your own admission everyone else but you
and [one other economist] do[es].â Appâx 597. In other words, to the Department,
âmodernâ was antonymous to âKeynesian.â Next, Mastersâs explanation for why
Heimâs work was ânot consistentâ with the collaboration-friendly research
requirement was that the people in the Department Heim would be expected to
collaborate with âdo not appreciateâ Keynesian research perspectives. Id. at 598.
In fact, the Department had already ârejectedâ other applicants who âmet the
[other] criteriaâ but âdo New Keynesian macro.â Id. Finally, the third job
23
requirement, setting forth the Departmentâs publication expectations, is at least
on its face more content-neutral. But even if we take it at face value, the record
suggests that an applicantâs failure to meet the Departmentâs preferred
publication history standards was not on its own disqualifying. For example, at
the time he was hired, Griffy had also never published (except perhaps as a
research assistant) in the top journals Masters invoked in his email. Nor had Li.
Heim contends, moreover, that Defendantsâ âself-reinforcingâ assessment of the
âtopâ journals in the field, id. at 547, is also colored by the fact that those
particular journals âdo not publish non-DSGE Keynesian articles,â id. at 543-44.
Whatever their merits, those assessments â which, as we discuss below,
were permissible for other reasons â firmly foreclose any attempt to escape
liability on causation grounds. It is not sufficient for Defendants to demonstrate
that they considered Heim unqualified because, when we âfocus[] preciselyâ on
Defendantsâ motivations, we cannot ignore the role their views on Heimâs speech
played in shaping why they considered him unqualified. Anemone, 629 F.3d at 114
(internal quotation marks omitted). The undisputed facts compel the conclusion
that the content of Heimâs academic scholarship was central to Defendantsâ
assessment of his qualifications. It is therefore impossible for a reasonable jury to
24
conclude that Defendants âwould have taken the same action in the absence ofâ
that speech. Id. at 115 (internal quotation marks omitted).
III. Extent of First Amendment Protection
As a result, the outcome here hinges on whether the First Amendment
forecloses decision-makers within a public university from making hiring
decisions based on such content-driven assessments.
âRegardless of the factual context, we have required a plaintiff alleging
retaliation to establish speech protected by the First Amendmentâ in that relevant
context. Weintraub v. Bd. of Educ., 593 F.3d 196, 200(2d Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks omitted). That requirement is somewhat elusive in the public employment setting, where employees must generally ââby necessity . . . accept certain limitationsââ on their First Amendment freedoms because, as government insiders, their speech âcan âcontravene governmental policies or impair the proper performance of governmental functions.ââId. at 201
(alteration in original), quoting Garcetti,547 U.S. at 418-19
; see Connick v. Myers,461 U.S. 138, 143
(1983)
(articulating âthe common sense realizationâ underpinning Pickering âthat
government offices could not function if every employment decision became a
constitutional matterâ). Still, a public employee âdoes not relinquish all First
25
Amendment rights otherwise enjoyed by citizens just by reason of his or her
employment.â City of San Diego v. Roe, 543 U.S. 77, 80 (2004).
A. First Amendment Frameworks
Over time, guided by those principles, the Supreme Court has assembled a
two-pronged test to determine whether the First Amendment insulates a public
employee from an alleged retaliatory act by their employer: (1) âwhether the
employee spoke as a citizen on a matter of public concernâ and (2) if so, whether
the employer had âan adequate justification for treating the employee differently
based on his or her speech from any other member of the general public.â Montero
v. City of Yonkers, 890 F.3d 386, 395(2d Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted), citing Garcetti,547 U.S. at 418
and Pickering,391 U.S. at 568
. We begin this portion of our analysis by determining how those factors apply in the âuniqueâ context of academia. Adams v. Trustees of the Univ. of N.C.-Wilmington,640 F.3d 550, 564
(4th Cir. 2011).
1. Pickering and Garcetti
For its part, the district court applied two different analyses in the
alternative. The older framework it applied was the line of authority extending
from Pickering, looking only to (1) whether the employee was speaking on a
26
matter of âpublic concern,â Connick, 461 U.S. at 146(under Pickering, if the speech at issue âcannot be fairly characterized as constituting speech on a matter of public concern, it is unnecessary for us to scrutinize the reasons for [the adverse action]â); and if so, (2) whether the employerâs reaction to that speech was nonetheless justified, balancing the employeeâs interest âin commenting upon matters of public concernâ against the public employerâs interest in âpromoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.â Pickering,391 U.S. at 568
; see Matthews v. City of New York,779 F.3d 167, 172-73
(2d Cir.
2015).
The district court also applied the framework that the Supreme Court,
nearly 40 years after Pickering, articulated in Garcetti. The Garcetti Court
ânarrowedâ the scope of First Amendment protection for public employees,
inserting an additional rung into that longstanding Pickering framework.
Weintraub, 593 F.3d at 201(internal quotation marks omitted). â[W]hen public employees make statements pursuant to their official duties,â it explained, âthe employees are not speaking as citizens for First Amendment purposes, and the Constitution does not insulate their communications from employer discipline.â Garcetti,547 U.S. at 421
. Thus, in effect, under Garcetti, âemployee speechâ â i.e.,
27
speech pursuant to a public employeeâs official duties â is weeded out before even
reaching the Pickering framework. Lane v. Franks, 573 U.S. 228, 237 (2014). Only where the speech at issue is so-called âcitizen speechâ does a court then proceed, under Pickering, to determining whether the speech addressed a matter of public concern and, if so, to balancing the relevant employee and employer interests.Id. 2
. Garcetti Does Not Apply Here
This Court, however, has yet to decide whether Garcetti even applies in the
âspecialâ context of academia. E. Hartford Ed. Assân v. Bd. of Ed., 562 F.2d 838, 842- 43 (2d Cir. 1977). The Garcetti Court deliberately left that question unanswered. Writing for the majority â in response to a passage in Justice Souterâs dissent expressing his âhopeâ that âtodayâs majority does not mean to imperil First Amendment protection of academic freedom in public colleges and universities,â Garcetti,547 U.S. at 438
(Souter, J., dissenting) â Justice Kennedy expressly acknowledged that the Courtâs holding might not apply to academic speech. âThere is some argument,â he allowed, âthat expression related to academic scholarship or classroom instruction implicates additional constitutional interests that are not fully accounted for by this Courtâs customary employee-speech jurisprudence.âId. at 425
(majority opinion). That was the extent of the majorityâs
28
discussion of that question; the dispute in Garcetti itself did not arise in a
university setting, but rather from a deputy district attorneyâs claim that he had
faced retaliation for voicing (in an official memo that it was his job to write) his
critiques of a prosecution brought by his own office. See id. at 421. Consequently, the Garcetti majority âneed not, and for that reason d[id] not, decide whether [its analysis] would apply in the same manner to a case involving speech related to scholarship or teaching.âId. at 425
. The Supreme Court has yet to revisit that
question.
We, in turn, have recognized that âit is an open question in this Circuit
whether Garcetti applies to classroom instruction,â Lee-Walker v. New York City
Depât of Educ., 712 F. Appâx 43, 45(2d Cir. 2017) (summary order) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted), and district courts in our Circuit have varied in their application of Garcetti to various other kinds of âacademic speech,â Schulz v. Commack Union Free Sch. Dist., No. 21-CV-5646-RPK,2023 WL 2667050
, at *7 (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 28, 2023) (collecting cases). We are not the only Circuit to flag the uncertain implications of Garcettiâs academic carveout. See, e.g., Gorum v. Sessoms,561 F.3d 179
, 186 n.6 (3d Cir. 2009) (âThe full implications of the
29
Supreme Courtâs statements in Garcetti regarding speech related to scholarship or
teaching are not clear.â (internal quotation mark omitted)).
But other Circuits have started to answer that question. The Fourth Circuit
has cautioned that â[a]pplying Garcetti to the academic work of a public
university faculty member . . . could place beyond the reach of First Amendment
protection many forms of public speech or service a professor engaged in during
his employment.â Adams, 640 F.3d at 564. And so, relying on the Garcetti Courtâs âclear reservationâ of the issue, it opted to apply the approach established in its own binding, pre-Garcetti authority (based on Pickering) to a public university professorâs First Amendment retaliation claim predicated on speech that âinvolve[d] scholarship and teaching.âId. at 562-63
.
The Ninth Circuit soon followed suit, agreeing that âif applied to teaching
and academic writing, Garcetti would directly conflict with the important First
Amendment values previously articulated by the Supreme Court,â and instead
electing to âus[e] the analysis established in Pickering.â Demers v. Austin, 746 F.3d
402, 411-12 (9th Cir. 2014). More recently, the Sixth Circuit construed âthe
academic-freedom exception to Garcettiâ to extend to âall classroom speech
related to matters of public concern, whether that speech is germane to the
30
contents of the lecture or not,â enumerating a number of âcritical interestsâ
unique to the university setting that demand more ârobust speech protectionsâ
there than in other public employment contexts. Meriwether v. Hartop, 992 F.3d
492, 507(6th Cir. 2021); see also Buchanan v. Alexander,919 F.3d 847, 852-53
(5th Cir. 2019) (applying Pickering and Connick rather than Garcetti â without mentioning the latter â to a university professorâs First Amendment claim centered on classroom speech and conduct, emphasizing that âacademic freedom is a special concern of the First Amendmentâ (internal quotation marks omitted)).10 10 Although it has not expressly split from these other Circuits in any directly analogous case, the Seventh Circuit has been somewhat more hesitant to sidestep Garcetti in adjacent contexts. See Mayer v. Monroe County Cmty. Sch. Corp.,474 F.3d 477, 478-80
(7th Cir. 2007) (applying Garcetti to a First Amendment claim brought by an elementary school teacher who claimed she was fired after she âtook a political [anti-Iraq war] stance during a current-events session in her class,â but caveating that â[h]ow much room is left for constitutional protection of scholarly viewpoints in post-secondary education was left open in Garcetti . . . and need not be resolved todayâ); Renken v. Gregory,541 F.3d 769, 770, 773
(7th Cir. 2008) (applying Garcetti to a First Amendment claim brought by a university professor who alleged he was retaliated against after he âcomplained about the Universityâs use of grant fundsâ); see also Porter v. Bd. of Trustees of N. Carolina State Univ.,72 F.4th 573, 578, 583
(4th Cir. 2023) (applying Garcetti to a professorâs
âsarcastic[]â email to colleagues that voiced his concern that a faculty search
committee had ââcut cornersâ in vetting a candidate âout of a desire to hire a Black
scholar whose work focused on racial issues,ââ reasoning that the email
31
We agree with those Circuitsâ treatment of Garcetti. It cannot reasonably be
disputed that the Supreme Court reserved whether Garcettiâs âofficial dutiesâ
framework applied to âcase[s] involving speech related to scholarship or
teachingâ by public employees. 547 U.S. at 425. Likewise, no one disputes that the speech in this case relates to scholarship or teaching; thus, by its own terms, Garcetti does not bind us in this case. In other words, Garcetti leaves undisturbed our own pre-Garcetti authority in cases involving scholarship and teaching by professors at public universities. Those cases applied Pickering and its progeny. See, e.g., Blum v. Schlegel,18 F.3d 1005, 1011
(2d Cir. 1994); see also Dube v. State Univ. of N.Y.,900 F.2d 587
, 598 (2d Cir. 1990).11
Of course, the Garcetti Court also did not affirmatively announce that its
amounted to no more than âan unprofessional attackâ on a colleague that was
âplainly . . . unrelated to [the professorâs] teaching or scholarshipâ and was
therefore not subject to the Fourth Circuitâs decision in Adams).
11
Notably, in addition to their weighty discussion of concepts like academic
freedom, that is also how the Fourth and Sixth Circuits approached this issue â
treating Garcetti as non-binding in this very specific context, and relying instead
on their own pre-Garcetti authority. See Adams, 640 F.3d at 564, citing, e.g., Boring v. Buncombe County Bd. of Educ.,136 F.3d 364
, 368 (4th Cir. 1998); Meriwether,992 F.3d at 505
, citing, e.g., Hardy v. Jefferson Cmty. Coll.,260 F.3d 671, 678
(6th Cir.
2001).
32
âofficial dutiesâ framework does not apply to speech related to scholarship or
teaching. Nor have we addressed the matter in any post-Garcetti opinion. There is
therefore no binding authority that would preclude us from importing that
framework into academia if we felt that Garcetti (or other subsequent precedents)
had injected new principles into our understanding of the First Amendment that
required that result. See Deem v. DiMella-Deem, 941 F.3d 618, 623 (2d Cir. 2019)
(â[A] published panel decision is binding on future panels unless and until it is
overruled by the Court en banc or by the Supreme Court.â (internal quotation
marks omitted)).
But we do not; we in fact believe quite the opposite. Key to the Garcetti
Courtâs reasoning was its assessment that, because the memo at issue there was
authored pursuant to the employeeâs official job duties, the employeeâs speech
âowe[d]â its very âexistenceâ to those job duties. 547 U.S. at 421-22. For that reason, it continued, imposing restrictions on that speech would not âinfringe any liberties the employee might have enjoyed as a private citizenâ but rather would âsimply reflect[] the exercise of employer control over what the employer itself has commissioned or created.âId.
That makes perfect sense in the typical
government hierarchy, where the purpose of an employeeâs speech is to further
33
the ends of the employer, on a course charted by someone higher up the chain-of-
command, and where the wrong word at the wrong time risks âcontraven[ing]
governmental policiesâ or âimpair[ing] . . . governmental functions.â Id. at 419.
The problem with applying that reasoning here is that professors at public
universities are paid â if perhaps not exclusively, then predominantly â to speak,
and to speak freely, guided by their own professional expertise, on subjects
within their academic disciplines. See Sweezy v. New Hampshire, 354 U.S. 234, 250(1957) (âTeachers and students must always remain free to inquire, to study and to evaluate, to gain new maturity and understanding; otherwise our civilization will stagnate and die.â). That is their job. They ânecessarily speak and write pursuant to [their] official duties.â Garcetti,547 U.S. at 438
(Souter, J., dissenting) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted).12 And their universityâs 12 For those reasons, applying Garcetti to this case would pose a major obstacle to Heimâs claim. Heim disagrees, emphasizing that he did not undertake his research âpursuant to government policyâ nor as âpart of his ordinary dutiesâ as an adjunct lecturer. Appellantâs Br. 42-43. But âunder the First Amendment, speech can be âpursuant toâ a public employeeâs official job duties even though it is not required by, or included in, the employeeâs job description, or in response to a request by the employer.â Weintraub,593 F.3d at 203
. Rather, courts are
instructed to âexamine the nature of the plaintiffâs job responsibilities, the nature
of the speech, and the relationship between the two, along with other contextual
factors such as whether the plaintiffâs speech was also conveyed to the public.â
34
âgovernmental function[]â is to provide them a forum to do so. Id. at 419 (majority
opinion). Garcettiâs bar on First Amendment protection for any âofficial-dutyâ
speech would thus have the effect of exiling all public-university faculty
scholarship and instruction from the shelter of the First Amendment.
That cannot be. It certainly cannot be squared with the Supreme Courtâs
long-professed, âdeep[] commit[ment] to safeguarding academic freedomâ as âa
special concern of the First Amendment.â Keyishian v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of
State of N.Y., 385 U.S. 589, 603(1967); see also Sweezy,354 U.S. at 250
; Regents of Univ. of Michigan v. Ewing,474 U.S. 214, 226
(1985); Kennedy v. Bremerton Sch. Dist.,142 S. Ct. 2407, 2424
(2022). It was that very commitment that inspired the Shara,46 F.4th at 83
(internal quotation marks omitted); see Ross v. Breslin,693 F.3d 300, 306
(2d Cir. 2012) (âThe inquiry . . . is not susceptible to a brightline
rule.â). The contextual factors here strongly suggest that Heimâs scholarship,
though not required, was nonetheless pursuant to his official duties considering
(1) that there was at least some overlap between his research focus and the
material he was assigned to teach; (2) that he discussed his research ideas with
his colleagues in professional settings; (3) that the university conveyed his
research to the public by honoring him at events celebrating his publications; (4)
that he repeatedly leveraged his research to try to affect his work scope and
position within the Department; and most significantly, (5) that research would
have been a requirement of at least some of the positions for which he applied,
and the Departmentâs decision not to interview him for those jobs, based in
substantial part on his research focus, are the very alleged adverse actions at the
center of this lawsuit.
35
Garcetti Court to carve academic scholarship and instruction out from its analysis
in the first place. See 547 U.S. at 425;id. at 439
(Souter, J., dissenting). And to the extent the Garcetti Court left that door ajar, we echo the reasons several of our sister Circuits have expressed for closing it. We agree that â[t]he need for the free exchange of ideas in the college classroom is unlike that in other public workplace settings,â we agree that a professorâs academic speech is âanything but speech by an ordinary government employee,â Meriwether,992 F.3d at 507
, and therefore, fundamentally, we agree that ââgiven the important purpose of public education and the expansive freedoms of speech and thought associated with the university environment,â . . . Garcetti does not â indeed, consistent with the First Amendment, cannot â apply to [a public university professorâs] teaching and academic writing,â Demers,746 F.3d at 411-12
, quoting Grutter v. Bollinger,539 U.S. 306, 329
(2003).13 13 We note that our discussion here focuses specifically on the public scholarship of university professors, and we express no view as to how or whether Garcetti might apply to, say, an elementary school teacherâs speech, or speech unrelated to a professorâs teaching or scholarship, the potentially distinguishable academic contexts in which other Circuits have applied Garcetti. See supra note 9 (citing Mayer,474 F.3d at 478
; Renken v. Gregory,541 F.3d at 770, 773
; Porter,72 F.4th at 578, 583
).
36
Accordingly, we join those Circuits in holding that we must evaluate
claims founded on such speech outside of Garcettiâsâofficial dutiesâ framework.
B. Applying Pickering
But that holding still does not resolve whether any particular burden
imposed by a public university on a professorâs speech is permissible. Instead, in
Garcettiâs absence, we are left with the line of authority extending from Pickering
that instructs us to ask (1) whether the employee is speaking on a matter of
âpublic concern,â and if so (2) âwhether the relevant government entity had an
adequate justification for treating the employee differently from any other
member of the public based on the governmentâs needs as an employerâ â
balancing âthe interests of the employee, as a citizen, in commenting upon
matters of public concern and the interest of the State, as an employer, in
promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its
employees.â Matthews, 779 F.3d at 172-73 (internal quotation marks omitted).
1. Matter of Public Concern
As a preliminary matter, we disagree with the district courtâs assessment
that because âHeimâs academic writings about Keynesian economic concepts . . .
concern complex statistical modeling intended for consumption by a relatively
37
narrow audience,â they âdo not qualify as speech on matters of âpublic concern.ââ
Heim, 2022 WL 1472878, at *14. The fact that Heimâs research is neither targeted towards nor consumed by the general public may well suggest that the public is not especially concerned with him, or with his work. But that has little to do with whether that work addresses matters that concern the public. That inquiry measures neither popularity nor technical complexity; rather, it is a question of law to be determined based on âthe content, form, and context of a given statement, as revealed by the whole record,â Connick,461 U.S. at 147
-48 & n.7, looking to, among other things, âwhether the speech . . . had a broader public purpose,â Singer v. Ferro,711 F.3d 334, 339
(2d Cir. 2013) (internal quotation
marks omitted), and whether the speech can âbe fairly considered as relating to
any matter of political, social, or other concern to the community,â Lane, 573 U.S.
at 241 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, once again, the special academic setting of this dispute guides our
analysis. We have recognized that underlying Pickeringâs âpublic concernâ
requirement is âthe principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited,
robust, and wide-open.â Singer, 711 F.3d at 342, quoting New York Times Co. v.
38
Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270(1964). Nowhere is it more important to safeguard that interest, nor more difficult to confidently declare that it is not implicated, than in academia, where disputes about the best theoretical approaches or most productive avenues of research abound within and across countless disciplines. Some of those debates may strike outsiders as arcane, inconsequential, or even âtrivial.â Demers,746 F.3d at 413
. But the entire premise powering academic freedom is that the advancement of the arts and sciences is of long-term value to society, and that the benefits of academic scholarship are no less valuable even though the eventual benefits of particular works may be unexpected, indirect, or diffuse. See Sweezy,354 U.S. at 250
. Scholarly debates in theoretical physics, evolutionary biology, literary studies, or many other fields could produce lawsuits just like this one, and we would be hard-pressed to declare that the speech at issue in any of those cases does not ârelat[e] to any matter of political, social, or other concern to the community.â Lane, 573 U.S. at 241 (internal quotation marks omitted). âRecognizing our limitations as judges, we should hesitate before concluding that academic disagreements about what may appear to be esoteric topics are mere squabbles over jobs, turf, or ego.â Demers,746 F.3d 39
at 413.
But we need not decide today whether all academic scholarship satisfies
that inclusive standard, because the scholarship at issue here comfortably does
so. We have recognized that, whatever other speech may also qualify, âdiscussion
regarding current government policies and activities is perhaps the paradigmatic
matter of public concern.â Harman v. City of New York, 140 F.3d 111, 118(2d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). That is precisely what Heim and other macroeconomists do: they discuss sweeping questions of economic policy, analyze macroeconomic conditions, and debate the governmentâs proper role in shaping those conditions. Their work may perhaps be unlikely to attract a broad audience, but it nonetheless serves a broad âpublic purpose,â targeting matters of political, social, and public policy salience. Singer,711 F.3d at 339
; see Lane, 573 U.S. at 241. That is more than sufficient to clear, with
plenty of room to spare, the âpublic concernâ bar, and we therefore proceed to the
final step under Pickering: balancing the employer and employee interests.
2. Balancing the Interests
Turning last to that pivotal step, â[b]ecause of the infinite variety of factual
40
circumstances in which such conflicts might arise, the [Supreme] Court has not
announced a general standard in this area, but has instead relied upon an
identification and weighing of competing interests on a case-by-case basis.â
Locurto v. Giuliani, 447 F.3d 159, 173(2d Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). For our part, we have recognized that â[t]he extent of permissible regulation of State employee speech . . . depends both on the nature of the speech and on the nature of the public services performed through a particular employee or class of employeesâ and, accordingly, that the appropriate balance between employer and employee interests âmay differ with respect to different types of State employees.â Blum,18 F.3d at 1011
. To that end, in a case like this, we must undertake a ânuanced consideration of the range of issues that arise in the unique genre of academia.â Adams,640 F.3d at 564
.
In that special context, we balance educatorsâ interest in speaking on
matters of public concern against the interests of their state-school employers,
taking care to âprotect the First Amendment principles that underlie both [an
employeeâs] interest in free speech and [a universityâs] underlying mission.â
Blum, 18 F.3d at 1011(emphases added); see also E. Hartford Ed. Assân,562 F.2d at 41
843 (exalting academia as âa special profession essential to the public welfareâ
(internal quotation marks and alteration omitted)).
We have already said much about the employeeâs interests. No one
disputes the wealth of authority championing individual educatorsâ interest in
academic freedom and establishing, broadly, that the First Amendment âtolerates
neither laws nor other means of coercion, persuasion or intimidation âthat cast a
pall of orthodoxyâ over the free exchange of ideas in the classroom.ââ Dube, 900
F.2d at 598, quoting Keyishian, 385 U.S. at 603. Typically, though, those cases operate as âa caution to governmental administrators not to discipline a college teacher for expressing controversial, even offensive, views,â or for criticizing their employer, or for speaking in a way that may upset or disturb their students. E.g., Vega v. Miller,273 F.3d 460, 467
(2d Cir. 2001), citing Dube, 900 F.2d at 589, 597-99 (holding that the First Amendment did not permit a public university to deny a professor tenure âin response to pressure exerted by government officials and community activists outraged byâ that professorâs controversial curriculum comparing âNazism, apartheid, and Zionismâ).14 14 See also, e.g., Keyishian,385 U.S. at 592
(requirement that teachers answer under
oath whether they were affiliated with âany . . . group . . . which taught or
42
What sets this case apart from those cases is that, here, the professorâs
well-established First Amendment interests are not set only against the usual
government employerâs interests in the efficient, effective, disruption-free
delivery of public services, see, e.g. Reuland v. Hynes, 460 F.3d 409, 418(2d Cir. 2006), but also against the countervailing âFirst Amendment principlesâ that propel a public universityâs own âunderlying mission,â Blum,18 F.3d at 1011
. On that side of the ledger, courts have consistently celebrated the need to safeguard universitiesâ self-determination over the substance of the education they provide advocated the doctrine that the Government . . . should be overthrown or overturned by force, violence or any unlawful meansâ was unconstitutional); Perry v. Sindermann,408 U.S. 593, 598
(1972) (â[A] teacherâs public criticism of his superiors on matters of public concern may be constitutionally protected and may, therefore, be an impermissible basis for termination of his employment.â); Meriwether,992 F.3d at 510
(Pickering balancing favored professor who had been reprimanded for flouting the universityâs mandate to use studentsâ preferred pronouns, ârefus[ing] even to permit [the professor] to comply with its pronoun mandate while expressing his personal convictions in a syllabus disclaimer,â because notwithstanding the universityâs âinterest in stopping discrimination against transgender students,â the notion that âgender identity is an idea embraced and advocated by increasing numbers of people is all the more reason to protect the First Amendment rights of those who wish to voice a different viewâ (internal quotation marks omitted)); Porter,72 F.4th at 596
(Richardson, J.,
dissenting) (â[T]he freedom for professors to discuss or investigate controversial
problems without interference or penalty plays a vital role in our democracy.â
(internal quotation marks and alteration omitted)).
43
and the scholarship they cultivate. In one oft-quoted concurrence, Justice
Frankfurter proclaimed that â[i]t is the business of a university to provide that
atmosphere which is most conducive to speculation, experiment and creation,â
and to exercise âthe four essential freedoms of a university â to determine for
itself on academic grounds who may teach, what may be taught, how it shall be
taught, and who may be admitted to study.â Sweezy, 354 U.S. at 263(Frankfurter, J., concurring) (internal quotation marks omitted). We have likewise recognized that the frequently invoked but âdifficult to defineâ ethos of âacademic freedom,â Dow Chem. Co. v. Allen,672 F.2d 1262, 1275
(7th Cir. 1982), encompasses concepts like âthe Universityâs right to make its own rules concerning academic standards,â Burt v. Gates,502 F.3d 183, 190-91
(2d Cir. 2007), its âprerogative to determine for itself on academic grounds who may teach,â Lieberman v. Gant,630 F.2d 60, 67
(2d Cir. 1980) (internal quotation marks omitted), its âright to set its own criteria for promotion and then to evaluate a candidateâs fitness for promotion under them,â Bickerstaff v. Vassar Coll.,196 F.3d 435, 455
(2d Cir. 1999), and so on. See also Piggee v. Carl Sandburg Coll.,464 F.3d 667, 671
(7th Cir. 2006)
(â[A] universityâs ability to set a curriculum is as much an element of academic
44
freedom as any scholarâs right to express a point of view.â (internal quotation
marks omitted)). Those principles loom large here.
Still, we do not appear ever to have faced this precise scenario: a claimed
First Amendment violation arising from a public university departmentâs open
and deliberate adherence to a particular intellectual methodology or approach.
But although we have never expressly decided the question, the Departmentâs
motivations here recall those that we strongly implied were permissible in Dube.
There, a professor alleged that he was denied tenure âin response to pressure
exerted by government officials and community activists outraged,â Dube, 900
F.2d at 597, by a course description announcing that one of his classes would
explore âthree forms of racism . . . for comparative purpose[s]; e.g., Nazism,
apartheid, and Zionism.â Id. at 589 (alteration in original). We agreed that there
was a genuine issue of fact whether the defendants had impermissibly retaliated
against the professor based on the content of his class and the public outrage it
inspired. Id. at 598. But we also added an important caveat. The defendants, we
instructed, âmay defend against that claim on the merits by contending that they
denied tenure and promotion to Dube for permissible academic reasons, without
45
regard to the surrounding community pressure.â Id. (emphasis added).
The defendants in Dube proffered two such reasons. Both resonate here.
The first was the universityâs professed desire to foster collaboration between
faculty in Dubeâs Africana Studies department and those across other
departments. Id. at 591. As the dean (one of the administrators who formally
ârecommended that Dube be denied tenure and promotionâ) explained:
Africana [S]tudies has not yet fulfilled its potential or
accomplished its mission at Stony Brook. It needs
greatly to elaborate its relations with other departments.
. . . Professor Dubeâs apparent withdrawal from
academic psychology is not helpful. Africana Studies
also needs to become a department and develop a
graduate program in conjunction with other
departments; Professor Dubeâs scholarly posture would
be a hindrance here.
Id. The university, in other words, professed an interest in prioritizing tenure
candidates whose research would facilitate collaborative synergies with other
scholars. That desire for inter-departmental collaboration closely tracks the desire
for intra-departmental collaboration Masters expressed in his email to Heim â
that the Department was looking to hire someone who â[h]as sufficient synergies
with our research agendas that we can learn from them and them from us with
46
the possibility of constructive collaboration.â Appâx 598. In her deposition, Daniel
further elaborated on the rationale underlying that preference:
[Y]ou do need some synergy there. Like if I were to take
someone on just in a totally, totally different field, even
though itâs macro, Iâm not terribly helpful to them. And
they need someone to help them.
Good departments are strong in particular areas. They
are not super spread out and thin. So do you want a
department thatâs super spread out and thin and no one
does anything related to each other or do you want
people that have a working relationship . . . ?
Id. at 852.
Heimâs critique of that rationale is, of course, also perfectly reasonable. He
maintains that a university benefits from assembling faculty members with
divergent approaches, methodologies, and points of view within a given
discipline. Some universities may well decide to hire with that goal in mind. But
decision-makers within a university might also reasonably decide that
concentrating on scholars with similar interests or approaches will enhance
collaboration, the universityâs reputation, or the quality of its collective research
output, and hire with those goals in mind instead.
That touches upon the second asserted justification in Dube: concerns that
47
the candidateâs written scholarship did not meet the âusual standardsâ for the
position. Dube, 900 F.2d at 591. In this case, Heim was told by Daniel that the
university was prioritizing the techniques favored by âthe top macro and general
field journals,â where the Department âexpect[s] our faculty to publish,â and that
because (by Heimâs own admission) his research did not use those techniques,
the Department instead intended to hire someone else who had been âtrained in
those techniques.â Appâx 588. Masters later echoed those sentiments, explaining
to Heim that the Department was seeking candidates to publish research
featuring the âmodern (i.e., post Lucas Critique) macroeconomic[]â techniques
that Heim conceded his research did not feature, and that the journals that had
been willing to publish Heimâs research did not âachieve the standard that we
expect for tenure.â Id. at 597. To be sure, unlike in Dube, the Departmentâs
concerns here (at least those expressed openly) were less about the âquantity and
qualityâ of Heimâs work on its own terms, Dube, 900 F.2d at 591 (internal
quotation marks omitted), and more about what those terms were â that is, the
methodology and approach they reflected. And so, once again, the Departmentâs
concerns circled back to its overriding preference for DSGE.
48
Therein lies the rub. Because the Departmentâs desire both for collaborative
synergies and for publication clout go hand-in-hand with its methodological
preferences, they invite decision-makers to evaluate candidates through exactly
the sort of âcontent-based judgment[s]â that are normally âanathema to the First
Amendment.â Demers, 746 F.3d at 413. But academia is not normal; it is âunique.â Adams,640 F.3d at 564
. In this exceptional setting, we implied in Dube that such justifications are âpermissible academic reasonsâ for declining to hire or promote a candidate. 900 F.2d at 598. Today we say so explicitly.15 In the âspecial nicheâ that academia occupies, such judgments are âboth necessary and appropriate.â Demers,746 F.3d at 411, 413
(internal quotation marks omitted).
And, crucially, they are best left to scholars. See id. at 413 (â[W]e should
hesitate before concluding that we know better than the institution itself the
nature and strength of its legitimate interests.â). Evaluations of the quality of
academic work necessarily turn on judgments about its contents. Certainly, even
15
And, importantly, although the Dube panel remanded for a trial to determine
whether those departmental interests were, in fact, the actual motivations for the
universityâs decision, 900 F.2d at 598, here Heim disputes only the wisdom (and
the constitutionality) of those asserted interests, not their veracity. To the
contrary, the central premise of his lawsuit is that the Departmentâs transparently
pro-DSGE preferences were the driving force behind its hiring decisions.
49
evaluators with subject matter expertise may miss the mark. Innovative thinkers
may be discounted by proponents of conventional, but ultimately mistaken,
views. Conversely, departments in thrall to fashionable ideas may deride as âold-
fashionedâ scholars who, in time, are proven to have been correct all along. Work
that builds upon premises that the evaluator rejects may be dismissed out-of-
hand as less valuable regardless of that workâs quality in its own right, and
regardless of whether, in the long run, it is the evaluatorâs predisposition or the
rejected premise that prevails.
But to the extent any of that is, as Heim insists, âwrong,â Appâx 546, it is a
wrong that we cannot right. If the academic enterprise is to remain an engine of
progress, decisions about the value of academic work must be left to academics.
Though, in nearly all contexts, government officials are barred from
discriminating among speakers based on their own judgments of the quality or
content of the speech, in this exceptional context where professorsâ advancement
necessarily depends on the quality of their work, and where the evaluation of that
quality necessarily depends on evaluatorsâ assessments of the workâs content, the
First Amendment operates differently. It must operate differently. Much as
importing Garcettiâs rationale from typical public employment settings into this
50
atypical setting â effectively stripping professors at public universities of much of
their First Amendment protection in the process â would be inconsistent with the
core function of those universities, so too would any interpretation of the First
Amendment that bridles the efforts of experts at those universities to foster high-
quality scholarship with content-neutral constraints imposed by lay courts.
In that spirit, we have cautioned before, and reiterate today, that courts
âshould not substitute their judgment for that of the collegeâ because things like
âteaching ability, research scholarship, and professional stature are subjective,
and unless they can be shown to have been used as the mechanism to obscure
discrimination, they must be left for evaluation by the professionals.â Bickerstaff,
196 F.3d at 455n.7, quoting Kunda v. Muhlenberg Coll.,621 F.2d 532
, 548 (3d Cir.
1980). Here, there is no indication that the Departmentâs affinity for DSGE was
really a pretextual veil to âobscure discrimination,â or a cudgel to stamp out
controversial or dissenting viewpoints, or some other mechanism to advance the
views of non-academic public officials. Id. Heim was never deprived of the
opportunity to continue his research, or to share his Keynesian perspectives in his
lectures. To the contrary, even as they transparently preferred tenure-track
candidates with research focuses that differed from Heimâs, both Daniel and
51
Masters actively encouraged Heim to continue his own research. And he did;
even after he missed out on the 2017 position, he was able to publish several
books alongside his ongoing teaching responsibilities. That research was
promptly celebrated and publicized by the university. No speech â controversial,
dissenting, or otherwise â was muzzled.
We do not minimize Heimâs interest in retaining the freedom to perform
scholarship as he wishes, or in competing for positions that might better facilitate
that scholarship; nor do we suggest that the decision not to hire an applicant
based on the applicantâs views on academic debates can never prevail over the
employerâs interests under Pickering. But we are tasked here with balancing (1) an
employeeâs asserted interest not simply in speaking freely through his
scholarship, but in being considered, without regard to the content of that
scholarship, for advancement from a job where he is already empowered to do
that research and entrusted to espouse his views as a teacher; against (2) a
universityâs interest in deciding for itself what skills, expertise, and academic
perspectives it wishes to prioritize in its hiring and staffing decisions.
In this case, considering both âthe nature of the speech and . . . the nature
of the public services performedâ by this particular public employer, Blum, 18
52
F.3d at 1011, the latter interest is the weightier. Defendants have decided to
prioritize, for purposes of scarce tenure-track positions, a particular methodology.
Heim does not dispute that their decision was the product of a learned and
strategic choice, made by experts in their good faith professional judgment, free
from any influence from political entities in the state or other governmental or
university officials outside the relevant discipline. Compare Dube, 900 F.2d at 597.
That is, and must be, permissible. If the Supreme Courtâs (and this Courtâs)
enthusiastic endorsement of the First Amendment principles supporting a
universityâs academic freedom is to be given any practical bite, decision-makers
within a university must be permitted to consider the content of an aspiring
faculty memberâs academic speech, and to make judgments informed by their
own scholarly views, when making academic appointments.
CONCLUSION
We have considered Heimâs other arguments and conclude that they are
without merit. Thus, for the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the
district court.
53