From jeem-skills
Anticipates and defuses referee objections for Journal of Environmental Economics and Management (JEEM) submissions. Guides pre-submission self-review and pre-empts field-referee reflexes on sorting, spatial SEs, leakage, hypothetical bias, and scope.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jeem-skills:jeem-referee-strategyThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The paper is near submission and you want to find the holes a field referee will hit first
Before submitting, read your own paper as a hostile field referee for one hour and write the report you fear. The exercise surfaces the objections the writing has trained you to skip: the buffer radius you never justified, the spatial SEs you computed but buried, the welfare claim that quietly became "total" when the design only identifies "marginal," the recent JAERE paper you half-remember and never cited. Every objection you can pre-answer in the submitted draft is one the actual referee cannot use to send the paper back. This self-review is the cheapest revision round you will ever run.
JEEM referees are environmental and resource economists — they have run the hedonic, fought the spatial-SE battle, and read the valuation-bias literature. They are reflexively skeptical of (a) causal claims that ignore sorting or spatial confounding, (b) valuation estimates that ignore known biases, (c) welfare numbers that overreach the design, and (d) papers where the environment is decoration. Anticipate the field reflex, not the generic applied-micro reflex.
| Branch | The reflexive objection | Pre-empt it by |
|---|---|---|
| Hedonic / RP valuation | "This is sorting / omitted amenities, not WTP" | quasi-experimental amenity shock, boundary FE, parallel pre-trends in price |
| Stated-preference | "Hypothetical bias / no scope test / protest responses" | incentive-compatible design, explicit scope test, bias calibration, protest handling |
| Regulation DiD | "Staggered TWFE is biased; pre-trends?" | heterogeneity-robust estimator + event-study leads up front |
| Permit market / cap-and-trade | "Leakage and reshuffling flip the welfare sign" | bound leakage; show coverage; address uncovered-source response |
| Weather / climate IV | "This is weather, not climate; adaptation?" | separate short-run shock from long-run expectation; model adaptation margin |
| Any spatial result | "Your standard errors ignore spatial correlation" | Conley SEs with a reported cutoff, in the main text |
| Any welfare claim | "You estimate a reduced form but claim a welfare number" | the model/assumptions that license the welfare mapping (jeem-theory-model) |
A hedonic paper on Superfund cleanup is going out. Modeling the referees: a field referee will reflexively say "this is sorting, not capitalization" and "your SEs ignore spatial correlation"; a policy referee will ask "what is the implied benefit-cost ratio of cleanup?" The pre-emptive strategy: put the boundary-discontinuity specification and the parallel pre-cleanup price trends in the main text (answering R1's sorting reflex), report Conley SEs at two cutoffs in the headline table (answering the spatial reflex before it is raised), and add a benefit-cost paragraph translating the capitalization estimate into cleanup welfare (serving R2). The editor's scope screen is satisfied because the air/soil-quality externality is unmistakably the engine. Each likely objection is answered before it is voiced.
At JEEM the editor desk-screens for scope and style, then weighs the referees. Two implications for strategy: first, the scope screen is the highest-probability rejection, so a non-load-bearing environmental mechanism must be fixed before any referee subtlety. Second, when referees conflict, the editor's summary letter — not the longer of the two reports — sets the priority; design the paper (and later the rebuttal) around the threat to the core welfare claim, which is what the editor protects.
JEEM (via Editorial Manager) typically lets authors suggest and exclude reviewers; use it strategically and honestly. Suggest field economists who work in your specific lineage (hedonics, valuation, regulation, resource dynamics) and would engage the substance — not friends, and not people so close they would be conflicted out. Exclude only with a defensible reason (a direct competitor on the identical question, a known prior rejection). The editor reads these lists as a signal: a thoughtful suggestion list shows you know who the relevant referees are, which itself reinforces that the paper is genuinely in JEEM's field.
Beyond the methods reflex, JEEM referees increasingly ask the policy-relevance question: even a perfectly identified estimate can draw a lukewarm report if the welfare or policy payoff is thin. Pre-empt this by making the regulator-usable number (the efficient tax, the benefit-cost ratio, the optimal quota) explicit and bounded. A paper that nails identification but never says what a policymaker should do differently leaves a referee with nothing to champion.
【Journal】Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
【Skill】jeem-referee-strategy
【Branch reflex】top objection for this paper's branch
【Pre-empt】where/how it is answered in the paper (main text?)
【Spatial SEs】in main text? [Y/N]
【Welfare limits】stated honestly? [Y/N]
【Closest field paper】engaged? [Y/N]
【Desk-reject risk】mechanism load-bearing + scope/style compliant? [Y/N]
【Source status】verified URL / 待核实 / not asserted
【Next skill】jeem-submission
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jeem-skillsAnticipates JUE referee objections before submission and maps each to where the paper must answer them. Use when pre-empting spatial pushbacks.
Routes manuscript work for Journal of Environmental Economics and Management submissions, directing to specialized sub-skills based on current stage (scoping, identification, theory, exhibits, writing, etc.).
Anticipates and pre-empts referee objections for JPE manuscripts using a Chicago-style pre-mortem. Strengthens economic argument before submission.