From jpe-skills
Frames introductions and related-work sections for Journal of Political Economy manuscripts, positioning contributions against the economics literature with author-date citations.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jpe-skills:jpe-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The related-work section reads as an annotated list ("X did A. Y did B.")
JPE introductions are economic arguments, not literature catalogs. The reader should finish the first three pages knowing: the economic question, the mechanism, what was already known, the precise gap, and what you do about it. Positioning is judged on whether you have placed the paper against the right literature and engaged the theory the result bears on — not merely the most recent applied papers.
Because JPE is price-theory rooted, a credible intro usually connects to a body of theory (the model or mechanism the evidence tests), not only to prior empirical estimates. Often the foundational paper lives in JPE itself — Stigler's "The Economics of Information" (JPE 1961), Becker's "Crime and Punishment" (JPE 1968), or Black and Scholes (JPE 1973). Citing five recent DID papers but ignoring the classic theory your result confirms or overturns — especially the obvious JPE antecedent — is a positioning failure a Chicago referee will name.
A short "related literature" paragraph can follow, but the contribution must already be clear from moves 1–5.
【Target literatures】1... 2...
【Canonical theory engaged】refs (Chicago author-date; JPE antecedent if any)
【Gap / tension】the precise economic shortcoming in prior work
【Closest 3 papers】and how this differs from each
【Intro arc check】moves 1–5 present? [y/n each]
【Citation style】Chicago author-date verified
【Next】jpe-identification (or jpe-theory-model if model leads)
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jpe-skillsWrites or repairs the introduction and related-work framing for an Economic Journal manuscript, situating the contribution for a broad economics readership with author-date citations.
Positions a JOLE manuscript against the labor literature by staking the contribution against closest papers under Chicago author-date citation norms.
Positions a REStud manuscript against the closest related work by confronting nearest papers and stating the marginal contribution precisely.