Polishes Economic Journal manuscripts into clear, generalist-legible prose with tight voice, structure, and house-style formatting.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/economic-journal-skills:ecj-writing-styleThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The draft is wordy, hedged, or buries the result under qualifications
EJ prose must be clear, precise, and legible to a broad international readership. EJ has long valued clear exposition alongside substance: a generalist economist should follow the argument; a specialist should find it rigorous. This is the journal's distinguishing register — at EJ, an unreadable paper underperforms its own substance, so the writing earns real weight in the decision. The writing carries an argument; every paragraph advances the economic case, and the economic intuition is stated in words before the algebra.
Register rules:
ecj-literature-positioning): question, why a generalist cares, what is known, the gap, what you do, findings and the broad lesson.【Voice】economics-first, generalist-legible, unhedged where warranted? [y/n + fixes]
【Hedging removed】list of softened claims tightened
【Jargon】defined/removed for a generalist? [y/n]
【Equations interpreted】all have prose meaning? [y/n]
【Citation style】author-date; references alphabetical/chronological; data citations included?
【Length mode】full-length / short paper (budget respected? [y/n])
【Conclusion】states portable lesson? [y/n]
【Next】ecj-referee-strategy
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin economic-journal-skillsPolishes JPE manuscript prose into a spare, analytical, economics-first register. Tightens voice, structure, and citation/format house style.
Polishes REStud manuscript prose for clarity, economy, and result-forward exposition. Tightens introductions, abstracts, and overall writing to meet the journal's house style.
Polishes JEP article prose to be engaging, clear, and authoritative-but-readable. Revises sentence-level voice, abstracts, and openings—active voice, plain language, minimal notation.