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Comment by neilv

5 hours ago

PSA for any grad student in this situation: get a lawyer, ASAP, to protect your own career.

Universities care about money and reputation. Individuals at universities care about their careers.

With exceptions of some saintly individual faculty members, a university is like a big for-profit corporation, only with less accountability.

Faculty bring in money, are strongly linked to reputation (scandal news articles may even say the university name in headlines rather than the person's name), and faculty are hard to get rid of.

Students are completely disposable, there will always be undamaged replacements standing by, and turnover means that soon hardly anyone at the university will even have heard of the student or internal scandal.

Unless you're really lucky, the university's position will be to suppress the messenger.

But if you go in with a lawyer, the lawyer may help your whistleblowing to be taken more seriously, and may also help you negotiate a deal to save your career. (For example of help, you need the university's/department's help in switching advisors gracefully, with funding, even as the uni/dept is trying to minimize the number of people who know about the scandal.)

I found mistakes in the spreadsheet backing up 2 published articles (corporate governance). The (tenured Ivy) professor responded by paying me (after I’d graduated) to write a comprehensive working paper that relied on a fixed spreadsheet and rebutted the articles.

Integrity is hard, but reputations are lifelong.