Organizes YLJ article Parts into a doctrine-to-theory-to-normative arc with sequencing rules and counterargument pressure-testing.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/yale-law-journal-skills:ylj-argument-structureThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
A YLJ Article is a sustained legal argument, not a report. The dominant arc is
A YLJ Article is a sustained legal argument, not a report. The dominant arc is
doctrine → theory → normative: show what the law is (and where it breaks), explain why with a
framework, then say what should change. This skill sequences the Parts and stress-tests
counterarguments. It assumes the claim and novelty are settled (ylj-thesis-and-contribution,
ylj-preemption-check).
| Part | Job | Failure mode |
|---|---|---|
| I. The landscape (doctrine/facts) | Map the current law or practice; surface the tension your claim resolves | A neutral survey with no tension — reader can't see the problem |
| II. The diagnosis (theory) | Explain why the tension exists; introduce your framework | Description restated as "theory" with no organizing idea |
| III. The reconstruction (normative) | Apply the framework; say what should change and who acts | A wish list untethered from Parts I–II |
| IV. Objections & limits | Steelman the best counterarguments; bound the claim | Strawmen, or silence on the obvious objection |
Not every piece needs four Parts, but every piece needs the logical moves: problem → why → fix → limits. An Essay compresses these; a Note often foregrounds doctrine then a focused reform.
ylj-sources-and-bluebook); a structural argument resting on a misread case collapses.Draft the introduction's roadmap as numbered moves: "Part I shows ___. Part II argues ___. Part III proposes ___. Part IV answers ___." If you cannot fill each blank with a claim (not a topic), the structure is not yet load-bearing.
【Arc】doctrine→theory→normative (or the compressed version used)
【Part map】I: ___ | II: ___ | III: ___ | IV: ___ (each a claim)
【Strongest objection】and where it is addressed
【Scope/limits】stated explicitly? Y/N
【Next】ylj-sources-and-bluebook to footnote every legal/factual assertion
../../resources/worked-examples/01-introduction.md — a roadmap built as claims, not topics../../resources/exemplars/library.md — YLJ pieces whose Part structure rewards studynpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin yale-law-journal-skillsOrganizes a legal article's body into the doctrine → theory → prescription arc expected by Harvard Law Review. Useful when the thesis is set but the body sprawls or the prescription lacks a justifying diagnosis.
Sharpens a legal-scholarly piece's thesis into a single contestable claim and names the contribution type (descriptive, doctrinal, theoretical, normative, or critical).
Academic legal writing style guide for law review articles and seminar papers, based on Volokh. Enforces citation rules, counterargument requirements, and docx template usage.