From jme-skills
Explains the JME single-blind review process, distinctive "up or out" first-revision rule, and the ~50% publication-likelihood threshold for an R&R.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jme-skills:jme-review-processThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You need to set expectations for what happens after submission
JME's process is unusual and worth internalizing:
This funnel changes strategy: you cannot count on iterating across many rounds, so the first revision must be comprehensive, and at submission your contribution must be sharp enough to clear the 50% bar.
Use this as a second-pass capability check. First lock the main macro object, the identifying variation, and the policy-relevant counterfactual; then test whether the manuscript addresses macro and monetary economists who expect the shock, mechanism, and policy margin to be visible early.
claim / evidence / blocker / next edit rows so the next pass can patch the manuscript directly.resources/official-source-map.md for volatile rules and name the one unresolved fact that could change the recommendation.【Review model】single anonymized (single-blind), ≥2 reviewers
【Suggested/excluded referees】ready? Y/N
【Decision type】reject / R&R (R&R ⇒ ~50% likelihood)
【Revision rule】"up or out" — one revision, then accept or reject
【Next step】jme-submission (pre-submit) or jme-rebuttal (on R&R)
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jme-skillsExplains the Journal of Public Economics editorial process: single-anonymized review, Editorial Manager workflow, SSRN preprint option, and one-appeal policy. Helps plan timelines and expectations.
Explains the RAND Journal of Economics (RJE) review pipeline: editor screen, two anonymous referees, handling Editor decision. Helps calibrate submission strategy to avoid desk reject.
Explains the JIE editorial process: submission types, Prior Review Process expedite, desk-reject odds, and editor routing. Sets expectations for authors.