From jeem-skills
Plans response strategy for JEEM decision letters: triages R&R demands, routes new analysis to specialized skills, and drafts the response letter for editor and referees.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jeem-skills:jeem-rebuttalThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- A JEEM R&R, major-revision, or reject-and-resubmit letter has arrived
The response is a professional document the editor and referees will reread alongside the revision, so structure it for their convenience. Open with a short cover note summarizing the major changes and where the core demand was addressed. Then reproduce each referee comment verbatim in a quoted block, followed by your response in plain text, followed by a pointer to the exact location in the revision ("see revised Section 4.2 and Table 5"). Keep the register collegial and evidence-led even when a referee erred; the editor is reading for whether you engaged seriously, not whether you won every exchange. Brevity that shows the work beats long defensive prose.
The editor's letter is the contract — read it first and let it set priorities; referee reports are evidence, the editor's summary is the verdict. At JEEM the typical fault lines are field-specific: a referee will press on sorting/spatial confounding, valuation bias, leakage, or welfare overreach, and the editor will weight whichever threatens the paper's core welfare claim. Separate (1) requests that go to the headline number (must-do), (2) requests that strengthen but do not threaten it (do well), and (3) requests that are wrong or out of scope (decline with evidence).
jeem-robustness; a contested identification claim → jeem-identification; a welfare-mapping dispute → jeem-theory-model; new exhibits → jeem-tables-figures. Do the work there, then report it here.The strongest JEEM rebuttals concede where the referee is right and bound the damage rather than fighting every point. If a referee shows the welfare gain is smaller once leakage is netted, report the smaller number and show the conclusion survives — a defended $0.8X beats an indefensible $X. If a check moves the estimate, say so and explain why the headline holds. Editors read graceful concession as scientific maturity; reflexive defense of every claim reads as the opposite and makes the editor side with the referee.
A reject-and-resubmit on a cap-and-trade paper: R1 (methods) wants the permit-price endogeneity addressed; R2 (policy) wants the distributional incidence; the editor flags leakage as the binding concern. The plan: route the endogeneity to jeem-identification (instrument the cap with a legislated schedule), add a leakage bound to jeem-robustness (uncovered-source emissions response), and add an incidence table via jeem-tables-figures. The response letter leads each point with the new exhibit number and states that the net welfare gain falls from $X to $0.8X once leakage is netted out but stays positive — conceding the magnitude while defending the conclusion.
A revision that the editor cannot verify quickly invites another round. Provide a clearly marked diff or a changes-highlighted manuscript alongside the clean version, and make every response point to a specific, locatable change (section, table, figure number). For new analyses, state the result inline in the letter so the editor sees the answer without hunting through the paper. The goal is to let a busy editor confirm in one read that each demand was met — that confirmability, as much as the analysis itself, is what converts an R&R into an acceptance.
JEEM reviews can be slow and instruments more than one round of revision is common; plan for it rather than treating the first R&R as the last word. Three practical calibrations: (1) a "major revision" that asks for new identification work is a genuine invitation, not a soft reject — invest in it. (2) A "reject and resubmit" is treated as a fresh submission and may incur the fee again (待核实) — confirm before resubmitting, and make the new version substantially stronger, not cosmetically changed. (3) If a referee's demand would turn the paper into a different (e.g., methods-only) contribution, raise it with the editor rather than silently complying — the editor protects the paper's core welfare claim and can adjudicate scope creep.
【Journal】Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
【Skill】jeem-rebuttal
【Editor priority】the core demand from the editor's letter
【Triage】must-do: ___ | do-well: ___ | decline-with-evidence: ___
【New analysis routed to】jeem-robustness / jeem-identification / jeem-theory-model / jeem-tables-figures
【Referee reconciliation】how R1 and R2 are both served
【Welfare claim】re-bounded where challenged? [Y/N]
【Source status】verified URL / 待核实 / not asserted
【Next skill】loop to the routed analysis skill, then jeem-submission for the resubmission
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jeem-skillsStrategizes response letters and revision plans for Journal of Urban Economics (JUE) decision letters. Triages referee comments, routes spatial/identification concerns to relevant skills, and crafts a point-by-point reply.
Plans and drafts a point-by-point response letter and revision strategy for JEEA manuscript decisions (R&R, major/minor revision). Prioritizes co-editor requests, referee comments, and keeps replication package in sync.
Plans a response-to-referees strategy for JEBO decision letters: triaging comments, ordering concessions vs pushback, scoping new experimental treatments, and structuring the point-by-point rebuttal letter.