From jeea-skills
Revises prose, abstract, and introduction for JEEA manuscripts to make ideas legible to a general-interest readership. Shapes argument clarity without altering results.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jeea-skills:jeea-writing-styleThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The abstract or intro buries the question and the answer
JEEA is general interest, so the writing must make both the substantive question and the result legible early to an economist outside the subfield. The introduction arc that works: question → why it is hard (clean identification needed, or a disciplined model) → approach → headline result with its uncertainty → mechanism → contribution & lesson → brief roadmap. Two house rules: the headline estimate appears early with units and a standard error / confidence set, never a significance asterisk, and the abstract is short and answer-first (state the finding, not just the topic). This is a late-stage polish — write the intro last, after identification, the model, and robustness have settled.
The abstract is the co-editor's first (and sometimes only) read, so it must do the general-interest work:
Avoid "this paper studies / examines / investigates" openings; lead with what you found. Keep it within the JEEA author-guideline length (confirm on the live OUP page).
A draft abstract reads: "This paper studies the relationship between trade exposure and local labor markets using regional data and a fixed-effects approach." It names the topic and the method but never the finding. The JEEA-grade rewrite: "Does import competition cost local jobs, or just reshuffle them? Using a region's pre-existing industry mix as exposure, we find a 10 percentage-point rise in import penetration lowers manufacturing employment by 2.4 points (s.e. 0.5) with no offsetting service-sector gain — so the adjustment is reallocation away from work, not across it." Question, approach, magnitude with uncertainty, and lesson, in four sentences, no asterisks.
【Abstract】answer-first, finding stated? [Y/N]
【First paragraph】question + result + uncertainty (no asterisks)? [Y/N]
【Intro arc】question→hardness→approach→result→mechanism→contribution→roadmap? [Y/N]
【Claims】calibrated + scope limit? [Y/N]
【Next step】jeea-replication-package
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jeea-skillsRevises AEJ: Applied economics manuscripts to AEA house style: places the design and headline causal estimate with uncertainty in the first paragraph, polishes abstract and introduction.
Polishes prose, abstracts, and introductions for QJE manuscripts so the big idea lands fast for a general-interest reader. Reflects QJE's house style.
Revises prose for a European Economic Review (EER) manuscript — abstracts, introduction arc, research highlights, and Elsevier house conventions. Makes general-interest economics writing land.