3rd Cir.

Wang v. University of Pittsburgh

July 7, 2026 ·25-1816 ·Panel Decision ·Bibas · By Aisha Johnson

The Third Circuit reversed the dismissal of a cardiologist's defamation and retaliation claims against his university and hospital employers. The court held that the defendants' social media campaign and article retraction may have been motivated by actual malice and that the plaintiff's criticism of racial preferences constituted protected activity.

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Background

Dr. Norman Wang, a cardiologist and professor at the University of Pittsburgh, published an article questioning race-based preferences in medical residency programs. Following the publication, hospital administrators and colleagues launched a social media campaign accusing him of racism and misquoting sources, leading to his demotion and the retraction of his article. Wang sued for defamation and retaliation, but the District Court dismissed most claims, ruling he lacked state action and had not engaged in protected activity.

The court’s reasoning

The court found that Wang plausibly alleged defamation because the defendants’ statements implied undisclosed facts and were made with actual malice, as they contradicted verifiable sources. The court also held that Wang’s criticism of racial preferences in employment practices constituted protected activity under Title seven and Section one thousand nine hundred eighty-one, creating a genuine dispute of material fact regarding retaliation.

Academic debate is a full-contact sport. Debating ideas and questioning arguments can bruise people’s egos. But like boxing, academic debate bars low blows.

Wang v. University of Pittsburgh, 25-1816 (3d Cir. July 7, 2026)

What it means going forward

The decision allows a high-profile academic freedom and employment discrimination case to proceed to trial, signaling that social media campaigns and article retractions based on disputed facts may expose institutions to liability for defamation and retaliation.