From jhr-skills
Polishes Journal of Human Resources manuscripts: compresses abstracts, translates coefficients into policy units, reconciles with prior estimates, and enforces the 40-page limit.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jhr-skills:jhr-writing-styleThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The manuscript is too long for the 40-page limit
The first page should do five jobs in order:
Do not open with a broad policy problem for more than one paragraph. JHR readers need to see the design and reconciliation early.
Use a five-sentence abstract unless the journal's live limit forces something tighter:
Avoid empty phrases like "important implications" unless the next words name the actual margin. A good JHR abstract lets a reader recover the estimand, setting, magnitude, and policy lesson without opening the tables.
Table X estimates [claim] using [design]. The preferred specification in column Y
implies [magnitude] for [population]. This compares with [prior estimate] because
[sample/specification/design difference]. The result suggests [policy implication].
Illustrative job-training example (numbers invented to show the editing moves):
BEFORE: The coefficient on training (0.083, p<0.01) is positive and highly
significant, confirming that the program works. This has important policy
implications.
AFTER: Table 4 reports the lottery-based LATE. Column 2 implies that training
raises quarterly earnings by 8.3 log points — about $410 at the control mean —
for applicants induced by the lottery (SE 0.024, clustered on 38 sites). The
estimate sits between the prior experimental literature's near-zero results
and the larger observational ones; Appendix Table A5 shows the gap closes once
we match the prior studies' shorter follow-up window. At roughly $2,900 per
trainee, the implied payback period is under two years for compliers.
The rewrite names the estimand, converts the coefficient, states the inference unit, reconciles, and prices the policy — five JHR sentences doing five jobs.
When the manuscript runs long, cut in this order: (1) literature narration not attached to a benchmark estimate; (2) robustness prose that can become one sentence plus an appendix citation; (3) secondary heterogeneity cuts; (4) institutional history beyond what the design needs. Never trim the event-study figure, the first stage, or the reconciliation paragraph — those are what JHR referees read first.
[Section] abstract / intro / data / results / conclusion
[Main edit] ...
[Magnitude wording] ...
[Reconciliation wording] ...
[Page-limit fix] ...
[Next step] jhr-submission
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jhr-skillsPolishes prose, abstract, and introduction for JOLE manuscripts with Chicago author-date style and 20,000-word economy.
Polishes prose, abstracts, and introductions for QJE manuscripts so the big idea lands fast for a general-interest reader. Reflects QJE's house style.
Polishes JFE manuscript prose to be precise, evidence-forward, and free of hedging or overclaiming. Improves introduction structure and sentence discipline.