After the Psychology Department of the University of Wisconsin at Whitewater voted to offer Paul Hill a tenure-track position in clinical psychology, its chairman received a flurry of objections from Howard Ross, Dean of the College of Letters and Sciences. Ross wanted the Department to hire a woman instead. When the Department stood on its choice, Ross blocked the recommendation, and the position was left vacant. Sex discrimination in employment violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
International Union, UAW v. Johnson Controls, Inc.,
Wygant v. Jackson Board of Education,
First, a jury reasonably could decide that Dean Ross used Hill’s sex not as one factor among many, but as the sole basis for his decision. The Psychology Department, proposed to make two appointments in spring 1995, one in clinical psychology and one in social psychology. Both candidates were male. Ross informed the Department: “As indicated on the
recruitment signoff sheet,
the hiring goals for the [psychology] department is [sic] 61.8 percent women and 9.8 percent minorities. According to the attached
workforce utilization report,
there are 4 women and 2 minorities in the department. Thus, the department needs 3.23 women to
The University does not contend that its affirmative action plan is essential to eradicate the consequences of prior discrimination, either in the Psychology Department or elsewhere. To the contrary, the University denies that it has ever discriminated on the basis of sex. The University’s Affirmative Action Review Committee concluded in a report dated September 12, 1994, that the Psychology Department had not discriminated against women in hiring. Although it found that two members of the Department exhibited discriminatory attitudes, this Committee concluded that these professors’ “obstructionist or less than collegial behavior did not ... prejudice [an applicant’s] chance for employment.” The University does not seek in this litigation to contradict the report’s conclusion. Nor does the University contend that it has some other compelling justification, after the fashion of
Wittmer v. Peters,
Second, the University’s affirmative action plan does not require Dean Ross’s actions. According to the University, Dean Ross rejected the Psychology Department’s recommendation not because Hill is male, but because the Department submitted one name rather than three for Ross to consider. Yet none of Ross’s messages to the Department complained about the paucity of names (as opposed to the sex of the candidates). As the University’s lawyer admitted at oral argument, nothing in the University’s affirmative action plan requires departments to submit lists rather than single preferred candidates. Anyway, a trier of fact might see a multiple-name requirement as nothing but a smokescreen for discrimination. (Dean Ross may have wanted more names only to ensure that one woman was included, planning to appoint the woman without regard to the academic virtues of the candidates.)
Affirmative action plans may be arranged along a spectrum. See Christopher Edley, Jr., Not All Black and White: Affirmative Action and American Values 18-24 (1996); David Benjamin Oppenheimer, Understanding Affirmative Action, 23 Hastings Const. L.Q. 921, 926-33 (1996). On the one end are detailed hiring quotas designed to overcome past discrimination. On the other end are the sort of plans that all federal contractors must adopt, under President Johnson’s Executive Order 11246, a directive enforced by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs. Plans of the latter kind promise to search intensively for minority candidates and to ensure equal opportunity by clearing away barriers to employment; they do not entail preferential treatment for any group in making offers of employment.
According to the University’s brief, it has the sort of plan that every federal contractor adopts “to comply with the federal government requirements”. The University’s “Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action Policy”, which we take to be its affirmative action plan, is a four-page document, issued by the University’s Provost, very much in the spirit of Executive Order 11246. It prohibits discrimination and promises outreach to find and assist members of underrepresented groups. The only portion of this plan even arguably relevant to Dean Ross’s decision is this platitudinous paragraph:
UW-Whitewater is committed to a positive, continuing, result-oriented program to assure meaningful employment opportunities to all segments of the community and specifically to ethnic minorities, women, and the handicapped. These groups have suffered in the past from barriers to employment and promotion. The Affirmative Action program includes a continuing analysis of the employee structure to discover where there is under-utilization of ethnic minorities, women, and the handicapped; to establish goals to remedy deficiencies and guidelines and procedures to maximize opportunities for the recruitment of ethnic minorities, women, and the handicapped. Every position vacancy announcement must invite applicants from the aforementioned categories. Every person or committee charged with the responsibility of filling an unclassified vacancy must indicate to the Affirmative Action Officer the specific means to be used in directly contacting potential candidates in the respective categories.
Dean Ross did not conclude that the Psychology Department had failed to solicit applications from women; he did not mention any shortcomings in how the Department evaluated the candidates; he cared only about the bottom line. Whatever the phrase “result-oriented program” may mean, it does not (and can not) jettison the statutory and constitutional anti-discrimination principle and establish a quota system at the University of Wisconsin— though, as we have said, a jury could conclude that this is how Dean Ross administered it.
Third, any preference for one sex in making offers of employment, however slight the preference may be, must be justified. The Court said in
Virginia
that the justification must be “exceedingly persuasive.”
Wygant
says that “[t]he ultimate burden remains with the employees to demonstrate the unconstitutionality of an affirmative-action program” (
Suppose the University hired blindly from a pool that is 62% women. How likely is it that exactly seven of twelve would be female? What the University appears to have in mind is a world in which the absence of discrimination means that every department would exactly mirror the population from which its members are hired. But that is statistical nonsense. Suppose a university has 64 departments or faculties, each with five members; that half of all persons meeting its standards for appointment are women; and that the university makes appointments by drawing blindly from an urn containing infinitely many balls, each representing a candidate. Then the most likely outcome is that two of the 64 departments would be all male (26 = 32) and two would be all female. Ten of the 64 departments would be 80% male, and another ten 80% female. The remaining forty would have three men and two women, or three women and two men. The existence at this hypothetical university of 24 departments that were composed 80% or more of one sex would do nothing at all to imply discrimination or a need for corrective action; such a distribution is simply the result of chance.
This particular distribution, with four all-male or all-female departments, is only one possible outcome of repeated draws from the urn. Suppose a given university turned out to have six or eight such departments. Fairly simple statistical inquiries can reveal the probability that a cir-cumstancfe less wholesome than, chance was to blame. Some of these methods are discussed in Paul Meier, Jerome Sacks
&
Sandy L. Zabell,
What Happened in Hazelwood: Statistics, Employment Discrimination, and the 80% Rule,
1984 Am. Bar Foundation Research J. 139, 158-70; and
Mister v. Illinois Central Gulf R.R.,
Knowing the full distribution of academic staffs at the University could cast a more sinister light on things. To return to the 64-department hypothetical, suppose that university had four departments with five men and no women, and no all-female departments; suppose it had 20 departments that were 80% male, and none 80% female. Instead of the expected bell-shaped distribution, this university would have only one side of the bell. Truncation or skewness of the distribution would speak loudly, as the “inexorable zero” did in
Johnson,
and could justify intervention to make things look more like the outcome of a nondiscriminatory process. Nothing in this record suggests that the University of Wisconsin at Whitewater has any such problem, however. Dean Ross wanted to look at the Psychology Department in isolation, which no statistician would do, and to collapse the distribution by compelling
every
academic department to mimic the population from which it was hired. That would be as sure a sign of discrimination as is a lopsided or truncated distribution, and a plan to have every department duplicate the pool from which it is drawn cannot be sustained as a valid affirmative action plan. Such a plan neither rests on a powerful justification nor uses sex in a way that is narrowly tailored to the justification. See
Britton v. South Bend Community School Corp.,
Perhaps the University can offer more in defense of its decision, now that it knows where the burden lies. On this •record, however, Hill comes closer than does the University to establishing entitlement to victory. The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
