From governance-journal-skills
Builds the argument and theoretical contribution of a Governance manuscript—mechanisms, scope conditions, observable implications, and concept formation for comparative work.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/governance-journal-skills:govern-theory-buildingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
A *Governance* contribution is judged by what it adds to how we understand **governing** — the state,
A Governance contribution is judged by what it adds to how we understand governing — the state,
institutions, the policy process, bureaucracy, governance networks, accountability. The argument must be
sharp enough to test (govern-research-design) and portable enough to matter beyond one case. This
skill builds the argument and its concepts; it does not run the empirics.
Comparative governance lives or dies on concepts. Apply Sartori-style discipline:
For the single strongest rival institutional explanation, write one sentence: "If the rival account of governing were right rather than mine, we would observe ___ across cases; my argument instead implies ___." If you cannot write it, the theory is not yet a testable contribution — it is a description waiting for a mechanism.
【Core claim】one sentence
【Mechanism】why governing produces the outcome
【Scope conditions】where it holds (regimes / levels / domains / capacity)
【Key concept(s)】definition + position on ladder of abstraction + equivalence note
【Rival ruled out】the strongest-rival sentence
【Observable implications】what we should/should not see across cases
【Next】govern-research-design
../../resources/external_tools.md — concept-formation and theory-mapping references../../resources/official-source-map.md — Governance scope and contribution expectationsnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin governance-journal-skillsBuilds portable theoretical arguments for World Politics manuscripts by defining concepts, mechanisms, observable implications, and scope conditions that travel across cases.
Structures theoretical arguments for PAR manuscripts: defines constructs, mechanisms, observable implications, scope conditions, and practitioner so-what.
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'.