Careers
Background
About Us
The Library Innovation Lab is a team of librarians, programmers, artists, and lawyers with a broad mission: to build open-source tools and services to advance open knowledge.
We currently support three long-running services ( Perma, H2O Open Casebook, and the Caselaw Access Project ) as well as a range of shorter-term experiments.
Why work with us?
Job stability and support. While we maintain the creative atmosphere and flexibility of a small innovation lab, we’re backed by an established institution with strong benefits and support for employees.
Room to pursue your research agenda. We are located at the Harvard Law School Library and share a kitchen with the Berkman Klein Center and metaLAB. Going to events, having conversations, developing your scholarly perspective, and exploring it through creative projects are encouraged. We will specifically prioritize these things at the cost of shipping the next feature.
Set your own pace. We are a small, self-directed group that depends on internal motivation rather than externally imposed crunch time.
Build open source. All of our projects are open source and otherwise designed to maximize the public benefit of our work.
Work on stuff that matters. The projects we make are measured by how they help people in the long term.
Location
The Library Innovation Lab is a unit of the Harvard Law School Library and shares space with the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society.
We are based in a newly-renovated space on the Harvard Law School campus. Our full-time staff positions are hybrid/in-person; we typically aim to be in the office Tuesday through Thursday. Contractor and fellowship positions may be remote by individual arrangement.
Equity, diversity, inclusion, belonging and antiracism
The work and well-being of the Lab are strengthened profoundly by the diversity of our community and our differences in background, culture, experience, racial identity, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, and much more. We actively seek and welcome applications from Black and Indigenous people and people of color; women and non-binary people; the LGBTQ+ community; and people with disabilities; as well as applications from researchers and practitioners from across the spectrum of disciplines, methods, and life experiences.
Research Positions
Research assistant / student fellow
Thinking about legal tech, civic tech, or cultural memory? We have options.
Research Assistants: We’re seeking paid research assistants with a web development background to help us build open source legal tech and civic tech tools like Perma.cc, opencasebook.org, and Case.law.
Student Fellows: We offer student fellow positions to provide mentorship to students working on independent projects in the field of open knowledge (legal tech, civic tech, library tech, online governance, etc.). Depending on subject matter and professor relationships, student fellow positions may or may not offer stipend or credit; please reach out to us to discuss.
Eligibility: Positions are open to students inside and outside Harvard, with a preference for students at Harvard Law School and Harvard University.
To apply: send a statement of interest to lil@law.harvard.edu.
Fellows
The Library Innovation Lab offers a small number of stipended fellowships to people developing tools and communities to explore the future of open knowledge.
Who should apply: Fellowships are a particularly good fit for people— inside and outside academia!—with a track record of building tools or leading communities that advance the conversation about cultural knowledge and the internet, and who need financial and institutional support to take their next steps.
By “cultural knowledge and the internet,” we mean questions like: how do established cultural memory institutions adapt to the internet age and help societies reconstruct and remember their history? How do societies govern themselves, coordinate solutions to problems, and decide who to trust in the evolving information landscape? How do we preserve today’s knowledge for future generations?
In short, who are we, how did we get here, and where are we going? And who is “we” in a networked world anyway?
Fellowship details: Fellowships are individually arranged on a rolling basis, and may be any length from a week to a year. Fellows are expected to visit Harvard in person for a portion of the appointment, but need not be present full time. Stipends are available to support full-time work, but may be prorated depending on time commitment and other sources of support.
To apply: Email a résumé and statement of interest to lil@law.harvard.edu.