From public-administration-review-skills
Positions a Public Administration Review manuscript as a field-wide contribution by engaging core PA debates for both scholars and practitioners.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/public-administration-review-skills:pubar-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
PAR is read across public management *and* by reflective practitioners, so positioning must place the
PAR is read across public management and by reflective practitioners, so positioning must place the paper where a general public-administration audience sees both the scholarly gap and the practical stake. A "literature dump" that engages only one niche reads as off-fit for the field's flagship.
pubar-research-design).| If your paper is… | also engage… |
|---|---|
| a performance-management study | the accountability, goal-ambiguity, and gaming literatures |
| a public-HR / PSM study | the motivation, leadership, and bureaucratic-behavior work it bears on |
| a collaborative-governance case | the general theory of networks, coordination, and co-production |
| a budgeting / finance study | the implementation and managerial-discretion literatures it informs |
PAR is not JPART (theory-driven), Governance (comparative institutions), or JPAM (policy analysis). If your positioning cites only formal-theory work with no managerial payoff, you are writing a JPART intro. If it is a cost-benefit framing, you are writing a JPAM intro. Re-anchor to public-management practice.
pubar-submission)【Debate】the live PA disagreement / open question
【Key works】the 3-6 that define it (incl. cross-subfield PA)
【Gap】what is contested / mismeasured / untested
【Move】how this paper changes the debate
【Practitioner stake】why the resolved gap matters for management
【Strongest rival】and how the design will adjudicate it
【Next】pubar-theory-building
../../resources/official-source-map.md — scope and contribution expectationsnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin public-administration-review-skillsPositions a JPART manuscript as a theory contribution by engaging specific PA conversations (PSM, red tape, representation, performance, governance) rather than treating it as a fresh data point.
Evaluates whether a public-administration project fits PAR and determines the appropriate article type. Guides fit testing, sibling-venue triage, and article-type selection.
Positions a Governance manuscript in comparative governance/public-policy/PA/institutions literatures and distinguishes it from sibling-journal audiences.