Oxford postdoc ‘pushed out’ after authorship row, tribunal hears

Long-time postdoctoral scientist says he was ousted when he complained a professor had appropriated his own research

February 2, 2022
A view of the Radcliffe Camera through a gate at the University of Oxford in England

A postdoctoral researcher employed on fixed-term contracts for 16 years by the University of Oxford has argued that he was unfairly let go by his former employer after he complained that a professor had wrongly taken credit for his work.

In a case likely to focus attention on the precarity faced by many scientists, Amin Moghaddam is suing Oxford for unfair dismissal after his contract was not renewed in 2019 following a dispute over authorship of a scientific paper that was intended as the basis for a research grant. The university claims that he was lawfully made redundant.

In an employment tribunal that began last week, he insisted that he was denied the chance to gain a permanent position and barred from applying for grants as lead researcher, and also that his boss took excessive credit for Dr Moghaddam’s research.

The hearing heard that Dr Moghaddam joined Oxford’s Sir William Dunn School of Pathology as a postdoc in 2003 shortly after his tutor at Imperial College London, Quentin Sattentau, moved to the school. He worked under Professor Sattentau and, according to Dr Moghaddam, undertook all his collegial teaching duties for five years, co-supervised three doctoral students and performed significant administrative duties. Professor Sattentau and Dr Moghaddam’s former head of department, Matthew Freeman, are also named as respondents to the claim.

He was “referred to consistently since 2006 as a senior postdoctoral research assistant”, according to Dr Moghaddam’s claim, which adds that “since 2012 (if not before) [he was] recognised as running his own mini-lab within Professor Sattentau’s”. That was evident because he “advanced a discrete and distinct field of research within [the] lab, which otherwise focused on HIV research”, he says.

But Dr Moghaddam, whose contract was extended 14 times while at Oxford, was “kept in the vulnerable position of a fixed-term employee, reliant upon [Professor Sattentau] for his continued employment”, it is claimed. Moreover, his requests to develop his career by applying for his own funding or becoming a senior author on his own research were not supported by the respondents, he says.

Dr Moghaddam, who qualified as a doctor in his native Iran, adds that this treatment was “tainted by his race” as “promotions and opportunities made available to white members of [Oxford]’s staff…were never afforded to him”.

The situation worsened in September 2018 when Dr Moghaddam was sent a review article “ostensibly authored” by Professor Sattentau that was, he claims, heavily based on his own research and developed under his supervision by one of his DPhil students.

In it, Professor Sattentau was named as senior author and his DPhil student was lead author, while Dr Moghaddam was relegated to third author.

The tribunal heard that the dispute eventually reached an academic integrity panel led by Sir Andrew Pollard, the director of Oxford’s vaccine group.

Dr Moghaddam claims, however, that he then faced “hostile treatment” by the respondents, including being accused of scientific misconduct, as well as “increased and alarming threats to his job security”. “Most significantly…no efforts were made to secure further funding, or permit [him] to seek further funding to continue his research and remain an employee,” he adds, with his employment eventually coming to an end in March 2019.

Sir Andrew told the tribunal that it was “normal procedure” for a group leader to be listed on a paper, even if they had not done the research, provided that they had made an intellectual contribution; nor was it significant that Dr Moghaddam had been subsequently upgraded to joint senior author.

Sir Andrew added that his analysis of Dr Moghaddam’s CV and publication record did not suggest that he was “someone who was on a path to [research] independence”, as would be expected for someone seeking a permanent position.

Although Oxford declined to comment on the case, the respondents are understood to deny all the claims against them. The hearing continues.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Postdoc at Oxford ‘pushed out’ after authorship row, tribunal hears

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