From organization-studies-skills
Evaluates whether a phenomenon and research question can yield a theoretical contribution for Organization Studies (OS) journal. Diagnoses fit, scope, and theoretical generativity for OS's European audience.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/organization-studies-skills:orgstud-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have a phenomenon (a merger, a profession, an institutional disruption, a digital practice) but are unsure it can yield an OS-grade *theoretical* contribution
OS is a theory-first European journal: the unit of contribution is a move in an ongoing theoretical conversation about organizing, not a clean effect or a managerial fix. The strongest OS topics share three properties. (1) They are theoretically generative — the phenomenon is a window onto a mechanism, process, or tension that organization theory has not yet seen clearly (e.g., how institutional logics are reconciled in practice; how sensemaking breaks down; how power is reproduced through routines). (2) They are processual or relational — OS leans toward how organizing unfolds, becomes, is contested, which is why ethnographic, longitudinal, and historical designs thrive here. (3) They engage social theory — institutional theory, practice theory, Foucauldian power, Bourdieu, narrative/discourse, Weick — as a live interlocutor, not decoration.
A useful litmus test: write the sentence "This paper changes how we think about ____ in organizations." If the blank is a phenomenon ("AI adoption") rather than a theoretical object ("how organizations sustain control when expertise becomes machine-readable"), the topic is not yet OS-shaped.
| If the paper's core is... | Right home | Why not OS |
|---|---|---|
| a clean causal effect of an org practice on an outcome | AMJ / Org Science | OS treats identification as a means to theory, not the contribution |
| a deductive hypothesis test in US sociology-of-orgs tradition | ASQ | OS is European, more process/critical, less variance-template |
| pure theory with no empirical material | AMR | OS publishes empirical and conceptual, but conceptual papers still need a usable new move |
| organizing as process / institution / practice / power, theorized | OS | this is OS's center of gravity |
| a model or design-science artifact | Org Science | OS is sociological/interpretive, not modeling-led |
OS does publish quantitative work, but the bar is the same: the numbers must illuminate an organizational mechanism, and the framing must read as organization theory, not applied econometrics.
orgstud-methods.orgstud-methods)resources/official-source-map.md or marked 检索于 2026-06;以官网为准【Phenomenon】one sentence
【Theoretical puzzle】the anomaly/gap in organization theory
【Conversation】institutional / process / practice / sensemaking / critical + anchor(s)
【Question form】how-why (process) / whether-how-much (variance)
【Venue check】why OS and not ASQ / Org Science / JMS / AMR
【Next skill】orgstud-theory-development
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin organization-studies-skillsSharpens research questions for Organization Science manuscripts and evaluates venue fit against ASQ, AMJ, and Management Science.
Scopes and stress-tests whether a research question fits the Journal of Management Studies (JMS), focusing on phenomenon-grounded management-theory questions. Guides fit assessment and framing direction.
Evaluates whether a research idea fits ASQ's standard of surprising theoretical insight about organizations. Sharpens puzzles and contribution claims without designing studies or writing theory.