From jae-skills
Explains the Journal of Accounting and Economics review process: editor screening, double-anonymized review, decision letters, and the JAE Conference pipeline.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jae-skills:jae-review-processThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You want realistic expectations before submitting
JAE referees are economics-trained and will press hardest on identification (is the result causal or a correlated-omitted-variable artifact?), the economic mechanism (why would rational agents behave this way?), sample and measurement (proxy validity, sample selection), and alternative explanations. Expect demands for additional cross-sectional partitions, placebo tests, and robustness — not just clarifications.
JAE runs an invitation-only annual conference (sponsored by The Wharton School, Charles River Associates, and Cambridge Business Publishers; 2025 hosted at the University of Pennsylvania). Selected papers are printed in a dedicated special conference issue the following year; non-selected papers may go to a regular issue. The conference carries the same USD 650 submission fee and a USD 5,000 attendee-voted Best Paper award. This is a structural feeder unique among accounting journals — consider it a route for strongly economics-based work.
【Stage】desk screen / out for review / decision
【Decision type】desk-reject / reject / R&R
【Editor priorities】(binding) ...
【Reviewer requests】identification / mechanism / robustness ...
【Conference route?】consider JAE Conference special issue
【Next step】jae-rebuttal (if R&R) or reposition
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jae-skillsExplains the JAR review process: editor-panel structure, double-anonymized review, fee gate, desk-rejection risk, and the conference/Registered Reports tracks. Use when reading a decision letter or preparing a submission.
Navigates the JAE editorial process, explaining single-blind peer review, the Editor-in-Chief final decision, three-papers cap, rejection rules, and desk-screen failure patterns.
Explains the JIBS editorial process: desk-screen, area-editor routing, double-blind review, methods-editorial standards, and how to interpret decision letters.