Annual Review of Environment and Resources (annual-review-of-environment-and-resources)
Journal positioning
The Annual Review of Environment and Resources (AREAR) is the Annual Reviews venue for
authoritative, largely invited review articles that synthesize fields across environment
and natural resources — climate, energy, water, land, biodiversity, ecosystems, pollution,
and the human and institutional dimensions of resource use. Its defining expectation is a
definitive, field-defining synthesis by recognized experts: a critical, balanced account
that consolidates a body of literature, frames the state of knowledge, and sets the agenda —
not primary research and not a routine literature review. Because most articles are
commissioned, an uninvited primary-research submission is the single largest misfit. This
skill is a fit / venue-selection / re-framing tool. It does not replace the journal's
current author guidelines or its editorial/commissioning process. Before submitting or
proposing, re-check the live AREAR guidance.
When to trigger
- The author names the Annual Review of Environment and Resources and wants a fit check for a
synthesis in the environment-and-resources space.
- An author has been invited (or wants to propose) a field-defining review and needs the
authoritative-synthesis bar and structure expectations.
- The author must understand that this is an invited-review venue, not an outlet for primary
research or routine reviews.
- The author needs a credible alternative route if the work is primary research or too narrow.
Scope & topic fit
- Cross-cutting syntheses of climate change, energy systems and transitions, and their human
and policy dimensions.
- Water, land, food, and biodiversity resources: state of knowledge, drivers, and governance.
- Pollution, environmental health, and Earth-system change synthesized for a broad
environment-and-resources readership.
- Human–environment systems: institutions, economics, governance, justice, and behavior in
resource use and environmental management.
- Methodological and conceptual syntheses that integrate natural- and social-science evidence
on an environmental problem.
- Emerging, interdisciplinary topics ripe for a consolidating, agenda-setting review.
Method & evidence bar
- The contribution is the authoritative synthesis: comprehensive, current, and balanced
coverage by authors with standing in the field.
- The review must do more than summarize — it must critically evaluate, reconcile conflicting
evidence, and articulate the frontier and open questions.
- Coverage should integrate across disciplines and methods where the topic demands, with
even-handed treatment of contested areas.
- Sources should be primary and current; the synthesis should not lean on prior reviews or
miss major recent developments.
- Where the topic involves quantitative claims, the review should represent the weight of
evidence and its uncertainty accurately, not advocate one study.
- Original data are not the contribution; any illustrative synthesis figures must integrate
the literature, not present new primary results.
Structure & house style
- Annual Reviews format: a structured, comprehensively referenced review with a clear
conceptual architecture; re-check current length, section, and reference expectations on the
live guide.
- The article should open by framing the field and the synthesis question, then organize the
literature thematically rather than chronologically listing studies.
- Integrative display items (conceptual frameworks, comparison tables, synthesis figures) are
central; a summary-points / future-issues treatment is part of the Annual Reviews format.
- Because articles are commissioned, scope and outline are typically agreed with the editorial
committee — re-check the commissioning and proposal process on the live guide.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.md and
../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the official-source anchors, then cite
the current AREAR page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Annual Review of Environment and Resources information for authors" and follow the current Annual Reviews version.
- Confirm the invitation/commissioning status and the proposal or topic-suggestion process before preparing a manuscript.
- Re-check length, structure (summary points, future issues), and reference-format expectations.
- Re-check competing-interests, funding, author-contribution, and AI-use disclosure, and open-access/licensing terms.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.
Pre-submission self-check
Common desk-reject triggers
- An uninvited primary-research manuscript submitted to an invited-review venue.
- A routine, descriptive literature review with no critical synthesis or agenda-setting value.
- Narrow scope better suited to a specialist review than a field-defining synthesis.
- Imbalanced coverage that advocates the authors' own work or one school of thought.
- Outdated or incomplete coverage missing major recent developments.
- Submitting without regard to the commissioning process and editorial scope agreement.
Re-routing decision
- Critical synthesis of food science specifically →
trends-in-food-science-and-technology.
- A review that is primary-data-driven → re-frame as primary research for
environmental-pollution, global-change-biology, or a method venue.
- Cleaner-production/sustainability review with applied focus →
journal-of-cleaner-production.
- Broad solutions-oriented synthesis for a general audience →
nature-sustainability.
- High-profile single-topic review → a Nature Portfolio review article or
science-advances review format.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Annual Review of Environment and Resources
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest environment-and-resources topics>
[Synthesis contribution] <the field-defining, agenda-setting integration delivered>
[Invitation status] <commissioned / proposal pathway / uninvited — the key gate>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection — usually "primary research / uninvited">
[Official items to re-check] <commissioning process / length / summary-points format / disclosures>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>