From jue-skills
Sharpens urban economics manuscript prose to JUE house voice. Focuses on spatial mechanisms, intro arc, and plain language.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jue-skills:jue-writing-styleThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The introduction explains the data and method before it says what is *spatially* new
JUE referees read the first page to decide whether the paper is a real urban-economics contribution. A JUE introduction should, in order:
jue-literature-positioning).The vocabulary should make the spatial economics unavoidable. Lead with the primitives the field owns — capitalization, agglomeration, sorting, spatial equilibrium, market access, supply elasticity, incidence, reallocation. Avoid letting the paper drift into a-spatial framing ("treatment effect on outcome Y") where the geographic mechanism is the point. At the same time, do not over-reach into economic-geography vocabulary (clusters, milieu, path dependence) that signals JEG rather than JUE, nor into pure spatial-econometrics framing that signals RSUE. The register is applied urban economics: concrete, mechanism-first, magnitude-led.
JUE values papers that bear on urban policy, but the implication must be earned by the estimand, not bolted on. Thread it: state in the intro why the magnitude matters for housing, transport, or place-based policy; in the results, note what each estimate implies; in the conclusion, give the policy reading with the local-estimand caveat restated. Avoid the failure mode of a rigorous paper that ends with a generic "policymakers should consider..." paragraph disconnected from what was actually identified.
The fastest fit diagnostic for a JUE submission is the abstract deletion test: cross out every spatial word and read what remains. If the abstract still describes a coherent, complete result, the paper is probably not a JUE paper — the geography is a label, not the economics. A JUE abstract should collapse without its spatial terms because capitalization, sorting, agglomeration, or market access is the result. Rewrite until the spatial mechanism is structurally necessary to the sentences, then confirm the four-beat arc (question → design → magnitude → implication) survives within the word limit (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准 for the exact count).
A draft opens: "We use a regression discontinuity design with administrative data to study attendance boundaries." A JUE rewrite leads with mechanism and magnitude: "Households pay to live on the better-school side of an attendance boundary; we show this capitalization is 4.5% of house value at the line, identified by comparing otherwise-identical homes a block apart. Because the boundary is arbitrary relative to housing and amenities, the jump isolates willingness to pay for school quality — a magnitude that bears directly on the welfare case for school-finance equalization." The method now serves the mechanism.
【Intro arc】question→mechanism→variation→magnitude→contribution→equilibrium present? [Y/N each]
【Mechanism sentence】one plain sentence
【Headline magnitude】in interpretable units, stated early? [Y/N]
【Estimand honesty】local estimand not oversold? [Y/N]
【Geography】concrete (named) vs abstract?
【Abstract】question→design→magnitude→implication, ~150w? [Y/N]
【Next skill】jue-replication-package
Do not run this skill until identification and the spatial mechanism are settled — rewriting the intro around a magnitude that still moves wastes the polish and invites a second rewrite after the next robustness round.
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jue-skillsRoutes manuscript workflow for Journal of Urban Economics submissions, directing users to the appropriate jue-* sub-skill based on current stage or symptom.
Helps urban economics researchers target Journal of Urban Economics by evaluating manuscript fit, framing, method bar, house style, and desk-reject risks.
Tunes prose, structure, and abstract of Journal of Economic Geography manuscripts to reach economists and geographers simultaneously. Does not invent results.