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Copyright Clearance

Reproduction of copyrighted material without prior permission of the copyright owner is illegal and an issue of concern for the academic community.

  • Unauthorized copying can violate the rights of the author and/or publisher of the copyrighted work
  • Unauthorized copying is contrary to the academic mission of teaching respect for ideas and the intellectual property that expresses those ideas

When you send published and copyrighted materials to be reproduced, we recommend submitting written approval from the holder of the copyright.

Harvard Business Review Inquries

Âé¶¹´«Ã½ departments and schools work directly with Harvard Business Review for Copyright Clearance needs. Harvard Business Review will then invoice the department accordingly.

Guidelines for Articles

To view guidelines for articles that need to be published, visit the .

Acceptable Copies

The following copies are acceptable under copyright laws:

Prohibitions on Copyright

  • Copying shall not be used to create, replace, or substitute for anthologies, compilations, or collective works. Such replacement or substitution may not occur, whether copies of various works or excerpts are accumulated or reproduced and used separately.
  • There shall be no copying of, or from, works intended to be consumable in the course of study or of teaching. These include workbooks, exercises, standardized tests, test booklets and answer sheets and similar consumable materials.

In addition, copying shall not:

  • Substitute for the purchase of books, publisher's reprints or periodicals
  • Be directed by higher authority
  • Be repeated, i.e., copying the same item by the same professor from term-to-term

Common Copyright Terms and Definitions

Contact

Harvard Business Review

Luciano Durini, Regional Director
(305) 906-214
luciano.durini@harvardbusiness.org