From jpam-skills
Builds a theory of change / logic model for JPAM manuscripts: lever → mechanism → outcome, predicted heterogeneity, scope conditions for transfer, and unintended effects.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jpam-skills:jpam-theory-buildingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
JPAM is empirical, but the best policy papers are not atheoretical. The "theory" here is a **theory of
JPAM is empirical, but the best policy papers are not atheoretical. The "theory" here is a theory of change: a transparent logic that says why the policy lever should move the outcome, through what mechanism, for whom, and under what conditions it would (or would not) transfer to another jurisdiction or scale. This frame is what turns a single estimate into evidence a policymaker elsewhere can use, and it disciplines the cost-benefit and heterogeneity analysis downstream.
A team evaluates a tax-credit expansion. The bare version says "the credit raised employment." The JPAM theory-of-change version writes the chain — credit raises the after-tax return to work (mechanism: labor-supply incentive) → larger response for the population facing the steepest participation tax (predicted heterogeneity: single parents near the phase-in) → effect depends on local labor demand and on take-up via tax-filing (scope conditions) — and flags a plausible unintended effect (employers capturing part of the credit through wage adjustment). Each link is then a testable implication the design and heterogeneity analysis must address, and the scope conditions tell a policymaker in another state whether the result should travel. (Fields/numbers illustrative.)
【Lever → mechanism → outcome】the causal chain in one line
【Micro-foundation】who responds and why
【Predicted heterogeneity】subgroups specified ex ante
【Scope conditions】what the effect depends on for transfer
【Unintended effects】spillovers / GE / displacement flagged
【Next】jpam-research-design
../../resources/exemplars/library.md — JPAM papers whose mechanism makes the result portable../../resources/external_tools.md — mediation / mechanism estimation packagesnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jpam-skillsPositions a JPAM manuscript against prior policy-evaluation, economics, political-science, and public-management literatures to frame a decision-relevant gap and contribution.
Structures the theoretical argument of a JPART manuscript into a portable public-management theory contribution. Defines constructs, mechanisms, observable implications, and scope conditions for theory extension, testing, bounding, or overturning.
Builds testable theoretical arguments for AJPS manuscripts, covering empirical mechanisms, formal models, or measurement-driven approaches. Structures hypotheses, mechanisms, and scope conditions for empirical confrontation.