Understanding JIBS Review (jibs-review-process)
When to trigger
- Before submitting, to calibrate expectations for the JIBS process
- You received a JIBS decision letter and need to interpret it
- You are unsure how area editors and the methods canon shape your review
- You want to know what "revise and resubmit" implies at JIBS specifically
How the JIBS process works
- Editorial desk-screen. Submissions are first screened by the editorial team for fit and contribution before going to reviewers; weak-fit or phenomenon-free papers can be desk-rejected quickly. (The EIC vision piece reports an approximate ~5-day desk-reject and ~62-day first-decision target — treat as indicative, not guaranteed.)
- Area-editor routing. JIBS uses a departmental/area-editor structure organized by IB subfield (economics-finance-accounting, strategy, organization & management, marketing & operations, entrepreneurship, political economy/public policy, culture-conflict-cognition, HR/IR). Your keyword/area choice routes the paper; the area editor manages the review and writes the integrative decision.
- Double-blind review. Authors and reviewers are mutually anonymous; usually multiple reviewers from the relevant IB conversation. The editorial board also includes a Research Methods Advisory Committee and a Societal Impact Advisory Committee as full editors, reflecting JIBS's emphasis on method rigor and impact.
What reviewers hold you to
JIBS reviews are demanding on a recognizable set of IB-specific points:
- Phenomenon & contribution. Is there a real cross-border phenomenon, and an explicit, non-incremental contribution to IB theory?
- Cross-national measurement equivalence and construct validity — first-order, not an afterthought.
- Common-method variance — survey/same-respondent papers showing CMV symptoms are routinely asked to run validity checks and resubmit (a dedicated CMV editorial exists).
- Endogeneity / dynamic endogeneity — especially for internationalization-as-process designs.
- The methods-editorial canon. The ~28 AIB Research Methods SIG "From the Editors" editorials (2008–2022) on endogeneity, multilevel models, interactions, QCA, replication, CMV, and p-values function as de facto standards; reviewers cite them by name.
Reading a JIBS decision letter
- Reject / desk-reject: usually a fit, phenomenon, or fundamental-identification problem; re-target (JWB/MIR/IBR) or rebuild.
- Major revision (R&R): the common path forward — the contribution is plausible but theory, measurement, or identification must be strengthened. First-round accepts are essentially unheard of.
- Minor revision: confirm and tighten; address each point precisely.
- Read the area editor's letter as the priority map — it integrates and ranks the reviewer concerns. Where a reviewer cites a specific methods editorial, treat compliance with it as required, not optional.
Output format
【Decision type】desk-reject / reject / major R&R / minor / accept ...
【Editor's priorities】ranked from the area-editor letter ...
【Recurring IB concerns flagged】phenomenon / invariance / CMV / endogeneity ...
【Methods editorials invoked】which, and what they require ...
【Feasibility】addressable in one round? ...
【Next step】jibs-rebuttal (plan revisions, then draft response)
Anti-patterns
- Treating the reviewers and the area editor as equal voices — the area editor sets priorities.
- Ignoring a cited "From the Editors" methods editorial.
- Reading a major R&R as a near-accept; budget substantive new analysis.
- Re-submitting elsewhere without fixing a phenomenon/fit problem.