R&R Response Document (amr-rebuttal)
When to trigger
- You have an AMR R&R (Major Revision) or a Reject & Resubmit you intend to pursue
- The theory has been revised and you now need the response-to-reviewers document
- You must adjudicate conflicting reviewer requests in writing
Revise the theory before you write the letter. A rebuttal that argues without changing
the manuscript fails at AMR. Run amr-data-analysis and amr-theory-development first.
Structure of the response
- Opening to the editor. Thank the team; summarize the theoretical changes at a high
level (new construct definitions, sharpened mechanism, added boundary conditions, clearer
contribution). One short paragraph — substance, not flattery.
- Roadmap of major changes. A short list of the biggest theory moves you made, so the
editor sees the revision's shape before the point-by-point.
- Point-by-point responses. For every reviewer comment, in order:
- Restate the comment (verbatim or faithfully paraphrased).
- State what you changed in the theory.
- Quote or cite the revised manuscript location (section/proposition/page).
- If you disagree, argue it on theoretical grounds — respectfully and with reasoning.
- Handling reviewer conflicts. When reviewers disagree, say so, explain your
adjudication, and tie it to the editor's stated priorities.
How to respond well at AMR
- Show, don't assert. "We strengthened the argument" is empty; point to the revised
premise, the new mechanism, the added boundary condition.
- Respond to theory comments with theory. The reviewers are theorists; a substance
comment needs a substantive theoretical answer, not a wording tweak.
- Never offer data. If a reviewer asks for "evidence," reframe within AMR's mission:
strengthen the logical support, the mechanism, the boundary conditions, or the
disconfirming-case treatment — not an empirical test.
- Concede what is right. If a reviewer found a genuine logical gap, fix it and say so
plainly. Graceful concession builds credibility for the points you do contest.
- Defend the contribution explicitly if novelty was questioned — restate the before →
after and the differentiation from the nearest prior theory, framed against Whetten's
What/How/Why/Who-Where-When (AMR 1989, DOI 10.5465/amr.1989.4308371).
- Sharpen constructs if distinctiveness was challenged — redefine with scope conditions
per Suddaby's construct-clarity criteria (AMR 2010, DOI 10.5465/amr.2010.0419).
- Keep the tone collegial. AMR review is developmental and typically runs multiple
rounds, with the bar rising each round; the response should read as a conversation among
theorists. (At AMR's empirical sibling AMJ, "we ran additional analyses and the result is
robust" is a strong move; at AMR the equivalent strength comes from a tighter, more
complete argument.)
Per-comment template
Comment R[n].[k]: [restated comment]
Response: [what changed in the theory + why]
Location: [Section X / Proposition Pn / p. Y]
[If contesting] Respectfully, we retain [X] because [theoretical reasoning].
Checklist
Anti-patterns
- Arguing in the letter without changing the manuscript
- "We thank the reviewer and have addressed this" with no concrete location or change
- Answering a deep theoretical objection with a cosmetic edit
- Promising data or "future empirical validation" as if it resolves a theory gap
- Defensive or dismissive tone toward a reviewer's substantive point
- Ignoring one reviewer to please another instead of adjudicating openly
- Over-claiming the revision is "final" when AMR R&Rs typically run multiple rounds
Output format
【Decision being answered】R&R / Reject & Resubmit
【Theory revised first?】yes (summary of changes) / no → revise first
【Coverage】every editor+reviewer comment has a numbered response: yes/no
【Data offered?】must be: none
【Conflicts adjudicated】[...]
【Contribution re-defended】yes / n/a
【Next step】resubmit via ScholarOne → amr-review-process for the next round