From sociological-theory-skills
Articulates the theoretical contribution of a Sociological Theory manuscript by naming the new way of seeing and differentiating it from prior theory.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/sociological-theory-skills:soctheory-contribution-framingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The theory is built and the argument is valid, but the "contribution" is vague
At a theory journal the contribution is a conceptual advance — a new way of seeing. Abend's "The Meaning of 'Theory'" (ST 2008, 26(2):173–199) is the reminder to be precise about which kind of advance you claim: a new substantive theory, a re-read tradition (history of theory), a metatheoretical clarification, a formal construction, or a synthesis. The contribution must be statable as a change in the field's conceptual apparatus, not as a result.
A contribution that cannot be stated as "Before this paper, theory could not see X; after it, theory can see X" is not yet a contribution.
The most common ST rejection reason is "contribution not differentiated from existing theory." Defend against it explicitly:
soctheory-theory-construction).| Contribution type | Strength at ST |
|---|---|
| New theory / reconceptualization that reorients a conversation | Strongest |
| New concept + mechanism that dissolves a persistent puzzle | Strong |
| Synthesis bridging two traditions into new propositions | Strong |
| Re-reading a classic so the tradition does new work (history of theory) | Strong |
| Metatheoretical clarification of a kind of explanation | Solid |
| Bounding/refining an existing theory in a newly theorized way | Solid |
| Applying an existing theory to a new case without changing it | Usually too thin for ST |
| Surveying/organizing a literature | Not a theoretical contribution |
Lizardo et al., "What Are Dual Process Models? Implications for Cultural Analysis in Sociology" (ST 2016, 34(4):287–310), states a crisp before → after: before, "dual-process" was used loosely in cultural sociology; after, the paper supplies the precise cognitive-science scaffolding that disciplines the concept — a new way of seeing culture-in-action, differentiated from the prior loose usage rather than a relabel.
Close with implications framed as reasoned theoretical consequences, never as proven advice:
【New way of seeing】the conceptual machinery that did not exist before
【Before → after】theory could not see X; now it can see X
【Kind of advance】substantive / history of theory / metatheory / formal / synthesis
【Closest prior theory】name + the specific difference
【Over-claim risk】none / trim to: ...
【Implications】theory / research / other traditions
【Next step】soctheory-submission (or soctheory-writing-style for final polish)
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin sociological-theory-skillsFrames the one-sentence theoretical contribution for Organization Studies manuscripts, sharpening intro/discussion claims. Use when reviewers question contribution or when findings lack a theoretical move.
Frames the theoretical contribution of an AMR manuscript by differentiating what is new vs. prior theory and explaining why it matters.
Structures theoretical arguments for American Journal of Sociology manuscripts into portable, discipline-level contributions with explicit concepts, mechanisms, and scope conditions.