From jep-skills
Structures a JEP article as a narrative arc with hook, tension, synthesis, and takeaways for a general economist audience.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jep-skills:jep-narrative-arcThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The draft is organized like a survey ("Section 2 reviews X, Section 3 reviews Y")
A JEP article is an essay with an argument, not a catalog. The reliable arc for a broad economist audience:
jep-evidence-without-equations), competing views are weighed (see jep-balance-and-objectivity).Organize by argument, not by literature. "Three forces explain the puzzle" beats "Author A found…, Author B found…". The papers serve the argument; the argument does not serve the papers.
If the article is part of a symposium, its arc should occupy its assigned angle and gesture to the companion pieces rather than re-cover their ground — the symposium, not the single article, carries the full picture. Confirm scope with jep-editor-strategy.
【Through-line (one sentence)】[...]
【Hook】[puzzle / fact / example / debate]
【Tension】[what is at issue]
【Body sections (idea-titled)】1) … 2) … 3) …
【What we don't know】[...]
【Takeaways (3–5)】[...]
【Lesson that travels】[...]
【Next step】jep-accessibility-and-translation
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jep-skillsPolishes JEP article prose to be engaging, clear, and authoritative-but-readable. Revises sentence-level voice, abstracts, and openings—active voice, plain language, minimal notation.
Revises prose, abstract, and introduction for JEEA manuscripts to make ideas legible to a general-interest readership. Shapes argument clarity without altering results.
Polishes JEL survey prose to match the authoritative, accessible, long-form voice expected by the Journal of Economic Literature. Use after the framework is settled.