humrel-theory-development
GitHub为人力关系(HR)手稿构建理论引擎,聚焦社会机制、过程与变量逻辑、构念及边界条件。用于解决理论薄弱问题,强调基于社会理论的实质性贡献,区分过程与方差理论,确保解释工作与社会现象的深层逻辑。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill humrel-theory-development -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "humrel-theory-development",
"description": "Use when building the theoretical engine for a Human Relations (HR) manuscript — mechanisms grounded in social theory, process vs. variance logic, constructs, and boundary conditions. Builds the argument; it does not choose methods or run analysis."
}
Theory Development (humrel-theory-development)
When to trigger
- You have a work-and-society puzzle (from
humrel-topic-selection) but no theoretical machinery to explain it - Your "theory" is a box-and-arrow diagram with labelled constructs but no social mechanism
- A reviewer says the theory is "thin," "post hoc," "atheoretical," or "a relabelling of the finding"
- You borrowed a fashionable construct (resilience, agility, the algorithmic) as a veneer over an under-theorized result
The HR standard: a substantive theoretical contribution drawing on social theory
HR's gatekeeping criterion is "a unique and substantive theoretical contribution" to understanding work and organizations as social phenomena. Unlike a hypothesis-confirmation register, HR rewards theory that engages social theory — power, identity, institutions, practice, sensemaking, emotion, discourse, the labour process — and uses it to illuminate the relational dynamics of work. The deliverable is a change in how readers across organization studies, sociology, and psychology understand something, not a coefficient or a managerial recommendation.
Mechanism first, grounded in a social process
A construct is not a mechanism. State the generative social mechanism — the relational/organizational process that produces the pattern or sequence:
- Name the actors and what they are doing relationally (negotiating identity, exercising or resisting power, making sense, categorizing, controlling, caring, contesting).
- Name the social structure in which they act (occupation, hierarchy, field, institution, network, gender/class/race order, technological regime).
- Specify the processual or causal logic: why does this actor, in this structure, produce this outcome or this next move?
- Specify boundary conditions: where does the mechanism hold, weaken, or reverse? HR readers expect scope, not universal laws.
A good test: can a reader predict a new, non-obvious implication for working life from your mechanism? If not, you have a label, not a theory.
Process theory vs. variance theory — match the form to the phenomenon
- Process theory explains how and why something unfolds over time: sequences, events, becoming, contestation, feedback. Natural for ethnographic, historical, and critical HR papers.
- Variance theory explains how much an outcome co-varies with antecedents, with moderators/mediators. Natural for survey/quantitative HR papers.
HR accommodates both, but punishes a mismatch — variance framing forced onto a processual phenomenon ("control increased resistance") flattens exactly the relational dynamics HR exists to study. Let the form of the theory match the form of the phenomenon (this decision feeds humrel-methods).
Critical and reflexive theorizing
HR's Tavistock lineage makes critical theorizing first-class: theory that problematizes power, ideology, and taken-for-granted arrangements is welcome — but it must be generative as well as deconstructive. A critique that only unmasks, without offering a new way to understand or a constructive reframing, reads as polemic. Pair the critical move with a positive theoretical claim that other scholars can build on.
Inductive vs. deductive
- Inductive/grounded: theory is the output, presented after the data structure (see
humrel-data-analysis). A grounded process model can be the entire HR contribution. Avoid "theory by adjective" (calling a pattern "dynamic" without specifying the process). - Deductive: hypotheses must be derived with an explicit causal-logic paragraph each, tied to one core mechanism — not a bag of hypotheses. Moderators must be theoretically motivated, not data-mined.
Checklist
- A named generative social mechanism (actors + structure + logic), not just constructs
- Theory engages a recognizable social-theoretical conversation, not a borrowed buzzword
- Process vs. variance form matches the phenomenon
- Boundary conditions stated (where it holds / weakens / reverses)
- Mechanism yields at least one non-obvious implication for working life
- Critical papers are generative, not only deconstructive
- Deductive: each hypothesis derived from the core mechanism; inductive: a process model planned
Anti-patterns
- Box-and-arrow models with no mechanism ("constructs in search of a story")
- Variance framing imposed on a processual/relational phenomenon
- A fashionable construct used as a veneer over a thin finding
- Critique that only unmasks, with no constructive theoretical payoff
- "Theory by adjective"; hypotheses asserted rather than derived; a moderator zoo
Output format
【Journal】Human Relations
【Skill】humrel-theory-development
【Theory form】process / variance + why it matches the phenomenon
【Core mechanism】actors + social structure + processual/causal logic
【Social-theory anchor】the conversation it engages (power/identity/institutions/…)
【Boundary conditions】where it holds / weakens / reverses
【Non-obvious implication】the surprise for working life
【Next skill】humrel-literature-positioning
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:18


