From rje-skills
Explains the RAND Journal of Economics (RJE) review pipeline: editor screen, two anonymous referees, handling Editor decision. Helps calibrate submission strategy to avoid desk reject.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/rje-skills:rje-review-processThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You want to know what happens after you press submit on Wiley Research Exchange
RJE uses an editor-screened, then two-anonymous-referee model (source: rje.org/submissions.html):
The editor screen is the first gate. Estimate your risk against the patterns that bounce IO manuscripts early.
| Manuscript trait | Screen risk | Why the Board Editor reacts |
|---|---|---|
| First-order IO question on page 1 | Low | Matches the journal's narrow IO scope |
| Method named, matched to question | Low | Signals a credible, refereeable design |
| General-micro / macro framing | High | Wrong journal; not an IO advance |
| Over-length, sprawling exposition | Medium-High | Page caps are hard; signals undisciplined writing |
| Welfare/policy lesson buried in conclusion | Medium | IO contribution not legible at the screen |
| Thin or contested identification | Medium | A referee will catch it; Editor may pre-empt |
Suppose you submit a structural auction article estimating bidder valuations in timber auctions and inferring the revenue effect of a reserve-price change. Reading as the screening Editor would:
Framed this way, desk-reject risk is low; the same content with a methods-first opening and a buried policy lesson invites an early bounce.
【Stage model】editor screen → 2 anonymous referees → handling Editor
【Desk-reject risk】high / medium / low + why
【IO hook on page 1?】[Y/N]
【Cover letter】names market + method + headline + policy lesson? [Y/N]
【Next step】rje-submission (preflight) or rje-contribution-framing (sharpen hook)
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin rje-skillsRoutes RAND Journal of Economics manuscripts to the correct rje-* skill across the industrial-organization lifecycle, from topic fit through submission and rebuttal. Use when unsure which specialist skill a task needs.
Explains the JME single-blind review process, distinctive "up or out" first-revision rule, and the ~50% publication-likelihood threshold for an R&R.
Helps assess fit, reframe manuscripts, and navigate desk-reject risks when targeting RAND Journal of Economics for industrial-organization papers.