Have a request for the communications office?
We’re in the HLS ServiceNow portal!
Submit requests for online needs, photography or design work. You can also pitch news story ideas to Harvard Law Today.
Resources and Guides
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Event Publicity
See the rules and policies around posting your events on the HLS Calendar and calendar@law email.
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Graphic Design
The Office of Communications provides services include print design for posters, brochures, invitations and graphics for campus video displays.
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Editorial Style Guide
The Harvard Law School Editorial Style Guide was developed by the HLS Communications Office to support consistency within and among multiauthor HLS publications (magazines, reports, journals, and newsletters) and platforms (websites and blogs) across the school.
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Design Style Guide
The Harvard Law School style guide serves as a resource for designers, communicators, and anyone who is visually representing Harvard Law School — whether online, in print or in person. These guidelines are primarily for use by staff and external designers.
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Photography
We maintain an extensive digital library of professional-quality images of HLS faculty, student life, buildings, and events; assist the HLS community with hiring/finding a photographer; and help with HLS photo research for web and print projects.
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Video and Audio
Review guidelines for recording audio or video of events at HLS.
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Zoom Background Images
Get campus images and templates for creating your own HLS-branded background for video meetings.
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Podcasts by HLS affiliates
Podcasts are a great way to engage with the scholarship and legal conversations at HLS. These podcasts are hosted or produced by HLS faculty, staff, and students.
Latest from Harvard Law Today
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America at 250: ‘Citizens need to make this democracy work’
Commemorating 250 years, Harvard Law School professors discuss the conditions of American debate and democracy.
April 16, 2026
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Why three professors changed their minds
When Nikolas Bowie, Yochai Benkler and Samantha Power hit roadblocks to their beliefs, they pivoted to fresh approaches.
April 16, 2026
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‘We thought we were immune’ to democratic backsliding
Recovering democratic practices and values likely depends in part on an organized opposition and an active civil society, says Harvard Law Professor emeritus Mark Tushnet
April 16, 2026
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Does AI ‘threaten to destabilize’ the criminal trial?
Former federal prosecutor Duncan Levin argues that as AI-generated media blurs reality, the technology has the potential to “destabilize” some aspects of the criminal system.
April 15, 2026
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Weighing anonymity for public officials
Speaking on an Animal Law Week panel, Professor Noah Feldman says circumstances can sometimes determine whether transparency or privacy should triumph.
April 9, 2026