Frames the theoretical contribution and 'so what' for Human Relations manuscripts once results exist. Helps sharpen intro/discussion and respond to reviewer feedback.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/human-relations-skills:humrel-contribution-framingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Results exist but you cannot state the contribution in one crisp sentence
HR's explicit gate is "a unique and substantive theoretical contribution" to understanding work and organizations as social phenomena. A finding answers a question; a contribution reframes the question or overturns a prior in a way readers across organization studies, sociology, and psychology can use. Frame around the surprise from humrel-topic-selection and the mechanism from humrel-theory-development. What is not the HR deliverable: a firm-performance improvement (a JMS register), a well-powered confirmation of a moderated hypothesis (an AMJ profile), a pure critique with no constructive claim (closer to Organization), or a rich description that never theorizes (closer to Work, Employment and Society).
Avoid the weakest "contributions" HR rejects: "we replicate prior work in a new setting," "we add a moderator," "we study an under-studied population."
Place a sharp statement early (intro) and revisit it in the discussion:
"We contribute to [conversation] by showing [surprising insight about social relations at work]. Whereas prior work assumed [prior], we demonstrate [reframing/mechanism/boundary], driven by [social mechanism]. This implies [non-obvious consequence for working life] and reopens [new question]."
【Journal】Human Relations
【Skill】humrel-contribution-framing
【Contribution (one sentence)】...
【Type】reframing / mechanism / boundary / integration / new model / critical
【Prior overturned】what the field assumed
【Generativity】new questions opened
【Claim calibration】matches evidence? analytical vs. statistical?
【Next skill】humrel-tables-figures
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin human-relations-skillsFrames dual contribution (scholarly advance + practice payoff) for HRM journal manuscripts. Use when claim is not sharp or missing practice implication.
Positions a Human Relations manuscript's contribution against the relevant scholarly conversation and adjacent journals. For staking theoretical novelty and pre-empting scoping-screen / reviewer concerns.
Frames the one-sentence theoretical contribution for Organization Studies manuscripts, sharpening intro/discussion claims. Use when reviewers question contribution or when findings lack a theoretical move.