From harvard-law-review-skills
Guides topic selection for Harvard Law Review articles, essays, and book reviews, assessing fit, timeliness, and generalist appeal for the student-edited law-review market.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/harvard-law-review-skills:hlr-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
HLR is a **generalist, student-edited** flagship. A topic succeeds when it is (1) of broad importance
HLR is a generalist, student-edited flagship. A topic succeeds when it is (1) of broad importance across legal fields, (2) timely — riding a live doctrinal, statutory, or social development — and (3) plausibly placeable given the seasons and the competition. The student editors who screen are smart generalists, not subfield specialists, so a topic that only a niche bar cares about is off-fit.
hlr-thesis-and-contribution).hlr-placement-strategy).| Piece type | What the topic must offer | The off-fit trap |
|---|---|---|
| Article | A novel, defensible normative thesis on a consequential doctrinal problem | A descriptive survey with no argument |
| Essay | A sharp, timely intervention that reframes a live debate | A half-baked Article missing the apparatus |
| Book Review | An independent claim provoked by the book, not a summary | A chapter-by-chapter book report |
| Supreme Court Foreword/Comment | (Invited) a unifying theory of a Term or a key case | Pitching it uninvited as a regular submission |
hlr-preemption-check)Because law-review placement runs on a calendar (see hlr-placement-strategy), the topic itself has a
clock. A reaction to a just-decided Supreme Court case is timely but crowded — many authors race the same
deadline, and editors see near-identical drafts. A structural question that is enduring but underexplored
can be submitted slightly off the news cycle and still stand out. Decide deliberately whether your topic
competes on speed (hot, crowded) or on novelty (enduring, less crowded), and time the draft to match.
../official-source-map.md).【Topic】one line
【Live development】split / case / statute / regulation (and how recent)
【Generalist stake】why the whole legal academy should care
【Piece type】Article / Essay / Book Review
【Argument room】what you could argue for (preliminary)
【Competes on】speed (hot/crowded) or novelty (enduring/less crowded)
【Next】hlr-thesis-and-contribution (then hlr-preemption-check)
../../resources/external_tools.md — legal databases for scanning live developments../../resources/exemplars/library.md — real HLR pieces by field, to calibrate "HLR-sized"npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin harvard-law-review-skillsScreens legal-scholarship ideas for fit with The Yale Law Journal: tests generalist significance, timeliness, and novelty potential, and recommends Article vs. Essay vs. Forum vs. Note/Comment track.
Routes Harvard Law Review submissions through the student-edited law-review process by lifecycle stage, from topic selection to placement and editing.
Evaluates whether a law-and-economics project fits JLE vs. sister journals and sharpens its central legal/regulatory question. Use when a project's venue or question scope is uncertain.