Republication for Commercial and Course Use
Most material published by Princeton University Press cannot be reproduced without permission. Please note that it is the requestor’s responsibility to ascertain copyright, including checking credit lines and acknowledgments to confirm that the Press is the copyright holder or exclusive publisher. Individuals and businesses seeking permission for commercial use or course instructors seeking permissions for print and electronic course packs can follow this link to the Copyright Clearance Center to submit a request electronically.
Online Permission Request Form
For requests for titles not listed with the Copyright Clearance Center, you may submit your request online by following this link to our Online Permission Request Form. Please allow 2–4 weeks for a response from the Permissions Department regarding your inquiry. Please note that our grant of permission does not apply to any part of the material that is separately copyrighted. It is the responsibility of the requestor to determine, based on the credit lines or source notations listed in the book, the correct copyright source for the material.
Accessible Formats for Print-Disabled Students
If you work for a US educational institution that needs a digital copy of one of our books for a student with a print disability, please consult Bookshare. For UK requestors, please consult the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB). If the title you seek is not currently available, please submit a request to the relevant organization.
Permissions for Albert Einstein’s Writings
It is the responsibility of the requestor to confirm authenticity, research origins and/or ascertain copyright for Einstein quotations.
Publication and Other Uses of Material
If you wish to reproduce material for publication in print, digital, or any other form, including but not limited to the uses listed below, you need to obtain the written permission in advance.
- Publication in any hard copy form (i.e. book, periodical).
- Use in television, film or video.
- Publication in any electronic form.
- Duplication in any networked or public site, or in any “virtual library” (but you may incorporate the URL for certain material, though not the material itself, in your personal hypertext).
- Public display in any form of electronic or hard copy (except for a single copy for use in an academic lecture of seminar).
- Duplication by photocopying or any other means for use in any teaching pack.
Permission Contacts
For unpublished material or for material originally published after 1971 or published in The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, please contact Princeton University Press to obtain permission to publish reproduction of material.
For material originally published prior to 1971, please contact the Albert Einstein Archives at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem to obtain permission to publish reproduction of material.
Other Rights
Einstein’s texts are available for publication in translation in many languages. For more information, please contact the International Rights team at internationalrights@press.princeton.edu.
Einstein’s name and image may be licensed for use in commercials or advertisements in various media, including newspapers, magazines, television, film, or video. For more information, please contact Greenlight.
Permissions Guidelines for Authors
For some helpful tips about the principles of “fair use” and “public domain” works, and permissions considerations for illustrations, epigraphs, song lyrics, cover art, interviews, and more, we encourage you to read our guidelines for use.
Good Sense Principles
- Ideas, themes, and facts are not copyrightable.
- Limit your borrowing, both quantitatively and qualitatively.
- Avoid uses that replace the original.
- Keep the borrowed portion as insignificant as possible a part of the new work.