Agent Skills
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jel-topic-selection
GitHub用于判断候选领域是否符合JEL综述标准,通过成熟度、重要性、综合需求和范围可控性四项测试。若符合则引导至提案流程,否则建议改投其他期刊或调整方向,并协助提炼核心研究问题。
Trigger Scenarios
评估文献是否具备JEL级别的综述价值
判断主题过于狭窄或过于宽泛
在JEL与其他期刊间做选择决策
确认领域尚不成熟需暂缓
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jel-topic-selection -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jel-topic-selection",
"description": "Use when judging whether a literature is a Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)-scale survey topic — mature, important, and genuinely in need of synthesis — rather than a narrow review. Decides fit and frames the survey's animating question; it does not gather or synthesize the literature (that is jel-literature-synthesis)."
}
Topic Selection for a JEL Survey (jel-topic-selection)
When to trigger
- You have a candidate field and need to know if it is "JEL-shaped"
- A topic feels either too narrow (a single-question review) or too sprawling (a whole subfield)
- You are deciding between JEL and a sibling outlet (JEP, Annual Review of Economics, a field journal's review section)
- The literature is young/fast-moving and you suspect it is not yet mature enough to survey
The four JEL-fit tests
A literature belongs in JEL when it passes all four. If it fails one, route accordingly.
- Maturity. There is a body of research — multiple research lines, accumulated evidence, recognizable debates — not a handful of recent working papers. A field that is still being born produces a premature survey that will date in a year. (Fails → too young; wait, or pitch JEP instead.)
- Importance. The questions matter to economists broadly, not only to a dozen specialists. A JEL reader is a non-specialist economist who should finish the survey understanding why the field exists and what it has settled. (Fails → too niche; a field journal's review section fits better.)
- Need for synthesis. The literature is scattered, contradictory, or hard to enter — a competent newcomer cannot currently get oriented without a guide. The survey's value is the map, not the list. (Fails → already well-synthesized; nothing to add.)
- Tractable scope. One author/team can plausibly read and weigh the whole relevant literature in a single article. JEL surveys are long but not infinite. (Fails → carve a coherent sub-field, or split into two surveys.)
Decision table
| Situation | Verdict | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Mature, important, scattered, tractable | JEL-shaped | → jel-proposal-and-commissioning |
| Important but immature | Not yet | revisit in 2–3 years; consider JEP perspective |
| Mature but narrow / specialist | Wrong venue | field-journal review section |
| Mature, important, but enormous | Rescope | pick a coherent axis; → jel-organizing-framework to test the cut |
| Non-technical, broad-audience, short | Wrong venue | Journal of Economic Perspectives (JEP) |
Framing the animating question
A JEL survey is organized by a question about the field, not by a topic label. Before proposing, write one sentence of each:
- The state-of-knowledge question: "What do we now know about X, and how confident should we be?"
- The why-now: what makes a synthesis valuable at this moment (a wave of new evidence, a methodological shift, a policy debate, convergence or fracture of findings).
- The reader's payoff: what a non-specialist economist can do after reading (enter the field, teach it, locate the open questions).
Checklist
- The field passes all four fit tests (maturity, importance, need, tractable scope)
- The animating question about the field is written in one sentence
- The "why now" is concrete (new evidence / method shift / policy salience), not "no one has surveyed this"
- The intended reader is the non-specialist economist, and the payoff is stated
- You can name the 3–6 research lines the survey must cover (a coverage skeleton)
- Checked it is not a JEP piece (too short/non-technical) or a field-review piece (too narrow)
- You are not the only contributor to this literature — the survey will not be a self-retrospective
Anti-patterns
- "No one has written a survey of X" used as the sole justification — absence is not importance
- Surveying your own research program under a neutral-sounding title (self-promotion; JEL referees punish this hard)
- Picking a field so new that the survey freezes a moving target
- A scope so broad the article becomes a list; a scope so narrow it is a field-journal review
- Confusing "topic" (a label) with "animating question" (what the survey argues about the field)
Output format
【Field】<the literature>
【Four tests】maturity / importance / need-for-synthesis / tractable-scope — pass or fail each
【Animating question】"What do we know about ___, and how sure are we?"
【Why now】<new evidence / method shift / policy salience>
【Reader payoff】<what a non-specialist can do after reading>
【Coverage skeleton】<3–6 research lines the survey must cover>
【Verdict】JEL-shaped / rescope / wrong-venue (→ which venue)
【Next step】→ jel-proposal-and-commissioning (pitch the ~10-page sketch to the editor)
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:34


