Searches SSRN, Westlaw, HeinOnline, and Google Scholar to verify a YLJ claim is novel, then writes a 'what's new' paragraph distinguishing it from prior work.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/yale-law-journal-skills:ylj-preemption-checkThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
In legal academia, **preemption** means someone already published your claim. A YLJ piece that repeats
In legal academia, preemption means someone already published your claim. A YLJ piece that repeats
an existing argument is dead on arrival — student editors and the faculty they consult are reading the
same SSRN feeds. This skill runs the search systematically and turns the result into the manuscript's
"what's new" paragraph. It assumes the claim is already sharp (ylj-thesis-and-contribution).
| Source | What it catches | How to search |
|---|---|---|
| SSRN (Legal Scholarship Network) | Working papers not yet in print — the highest preemption risk | Title/abstract keyword + author follows in your subfield |
| Westlaw (Secondary Sources / Law Reviews & Journals) | Published law-review articles; KeyCite to see who cites a near-miss | Terms-and-connectors on your core concept + adjacency |
| HeinOnline (Law Journal Library) | Full-text historical coverage; older pieces Westlaw may miss | Full-text phrase search; check the foundational articles |
| Google Scholar / generalist | Cross-disciplinary work, books, recent preprints | Claim-as-sentence search; "cited by" on the nearest neighbor |
Search the claim, not just the topic: combine your novel move with the doctrine (e.g., the specific mechanism + the specific area), because the topic is crowded but the claim may be open.
For every close piece, decide which applies — and say so explicitly in the draft:
ylj-thesis-and-contribution), do not paper over it.Output a paragraph that (1) names the closest prior work, (2) states precisely what it did, and (3) states what your piece adds that it did not. This becomes the contribution paragraph student editors look for first.
【Claim searched】the exact sentence searched, not just the topic
【Sources swept】SSRN / Westlaw / HeinOnline / Scholar (all four? Y/N)
【Closest prior work】author, venue, what it did
【Relationship】different / narrower / different ground / PREEMPTED
【What's new】one-paragraph contribution statement
【Next】ylj-argument-structure (or back to ylj-thesis-and-contribution if preempted)
../../resources/external_tools.md — SSRN / Westlaw / HeinOnline / legal-research access notes../../resources/official-source-map.md — YLJ originality / anonymized-review factsnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin yale-law-journal-skillsRuns a law-review preemption check across SSRN, Westlaw/Lexis, HeinOnline, and Google Scholar to verify an argument hasn't already been published before drafting.
Routes YLJ submissions to the correct sub-skill based on track (Article, Essay, Feature, Note, Comment, Forum) and lifecycle stage. Dispatches; does not draft.
Routes manuscript work for The Journal of Law and Economics (JLE) submissions, directing to the appropriate jle-* sub-skill based on current stage or bottleneck.