Excessive "celebrity" worship in science is a related, but different problem.

Consider the alternative that I bet never occurred to the hiring officials: They could have also decided that it was arrogant for this "star" to insist that the institution hire their spouse (or child, or friend, or... whoever else) and that this is a buyer's market for employers, especially employers of Ph.D. scientists, and that they could easily replace that "star" and their spouse with 2 or even 3-4 others in the field currently seeking positions. Let them go. Instead of getting one "must have" and one "because we have to", why not go look for TWO "must haves"? Or even 3-4 (considering entry level faculty have less financial "requirements" and can be "obtained" at lower costs often) "seem to be very good, let's see what they can do"'s? Multiple benefits: 1) more scientists hired, 2) avoid the dodgy ethics of nepotism, 3) better bang for the hiring buck and 4) you MIGHT, just MIGHT get someone even (sit down, get ready for it) BETTER than the "star" you let go? God duth forbid the blasphemy! :)

Did you also consider the (real life) scenarios I described before and weigh them against the idea that spousal hiring is either good or necessary?

Aaron T. Dossey, Ph.D.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
http://www.allthingsbugs.com/Curriculum_Vitae.pdf



On 8/20/2011 2:38 PM, Kim van der Linde wrote:


On 8/20/2011 11:46 AM, Aaron T. Dossey wrote:
Maintaining the quality of one's marriage, personal life, sexual
relationships, etc. is not an employer's, University's, Department's,
the tax-payer's (for public institutions and those who receive
government grants/funds) or even society's responsibility.

Correct, it is the universities task to keep the best workforce around that they can hire. And if they deem that that requires to do a spousal hire, it is in their own best interest to do the spousal hire.

In the case I am most familiar with, their trophy employee got an offer from another university, who was willing to hire his spouse. So, his then and current employer made a counter offer including a spousal hire as well. It was competition between universities that resulted in the spousal hire. They did not give a damn about his personal life, they did not want to loose their trophy hire.

Kim

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