From british-journal-of-political-science-skills
Structures a political science finding into a portable theoretical argument with explicit mechanisms, scope conditions, and observable implications. Useful when a paper has strong empirics but a weak 'so what' or is called 'atheoretical'.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/british-journal-of-political-science-skills:bjps-theory-buildingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
At BJPS a result is not a contribution until it is attached to an **argument the field can use
At BJPS a result is not a contribution until it is attached to an argument the field can use elsewhere — across countries, cases, and subfields. This skill turns findings into theory: explicit mechanisms, scope conditions, and observable implications, in the idiom appropriate to your kind of work.
bjps-research-design.Ask: Could a scholar studying a different country, or working in another subfield, import this
mechanism/concept to their own problem? If yes, you have a contribution of general interest. If the
argument only works for your exact case, tighten it into a general logic or reframe (back to
bjps-topic-selection). BJPS's international, cross-subfield readership is the audience for the
argument's portability.
【Core claim】one sentence
【Mechanism】the causal/logical story
【Assumptions】(formal) the load-bearing ones
【Observable implications】testable consequences → research-design
【Scope conditions】where it holds / fails (and across which cases)
【Portability】who else (which country/subfield) can use this argument
【Next】bjps-research-design
bjps-research-design can test.../../resources/external_tools.md — formal-modeling and analysis tooling../../resources/official-source-map.md — BJPS scope and contribution expectationsnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin british-journal-of-political-science-skillsStructures the theoretical argument of an APSR manuscript into a discipline-level contribution by defining concepts, mechanisms, observable implications, and scope conditions.
Builds testable theoretical arguments for AJPS manuscripts, covering empirical mechanisms, formal models, or measurement-driven approaches. Structures hypotheses, mechanisms, and scope conditions for empirical confrontation.
Guides turning political science ideas into theoretically innovative arguments for The Journal of Politics (JOP). Covers formal, empirical, and normative modes with falsifiable implications and JOP's innovation test.