jpam-literature-positioning
GitHub用于指导JPAM论文文献定位,通过映射政策证据、明确决策缺口及跨学科对话,确立研究贡献。适用于引言撰写、回应审稿意见或调和冲突估计,旨在避免增量式叙事,强调对政策制定者的实际价值。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jpam-literature-positioning -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jpam-literature-positioning",
"description": "Use when positioning a Journal of Policy Analysis and Management (JPAM) manuscript against prior work — the policy-evaluation evidence base, the relevant economics \/ political-science \/ public-management literatures, and the policy\/program record. Frames the gap and contribution; it does not design the study or write the full review."
}
Literature Positioning (jpam-literature-positioning)
JPAM sits at a crossroads: a paper must engage the substantive policy literature (what is known about this program/field), the methods literature (how comparable effects have been credibly estimated), and frequently a second discipline (an economics result that a political scientist needs, or vice versa). Positioning establishes both an evidence gap and a decision-relevant contribution — not just "no one has done exactly this."
When to trigger
- Drafting or revising the introduction and related-work framing
- A reviewer said the contribution is "incremental" or "doesn't engage the [field] literature"
- Reconciling conflicting prior estimates of the same policy's effect
- Bridging an economics and a political-science / public-management literature
How to position for JPAM
- Map the policy-evidence base. What is the current best estimate of this (or the closest) policy's effect, and how credible is it? Cite the strongest causal studies, not just the most cited.
- State the gap as a decision gap. Frame the hole as something a policymaker actually needs: an unstudied population, a new policy regime, a contested magnitude, an untested mechanism, a cost-benefit unknown — not merely a methodological novelty.
- Engage across fields. Name the relevant economics, political-science, and public-management strands. JPAM readers come from all three; a one-discipline framing reads as parochial.
- Reconcile, don't ignore, conflicting estimates. If prior work disagrees, say why your design adjudicates (better identification, better data, a cleaner population) — this is a classic JPAM contribution.
- Distinguish from the program-evaluation gray literature. Government/think-tank reports often exist; position against them honestly and say what peer-reviewed credibility you add.
Contribution types JPAM values
- First credible (vs. merely first) estimate of a policy's effect
- Resolving a contested magnitude with stronger identification
- Extending an effect to a new population, setting, or policy regime that matters for scale-up
- Adding the cost-benefit / distributional dimension prior work omitted
- A mechanism that tells policymakers why a program works and when it would transfer
Checklist
- The strongest prior causal estimates cited, not just the most-cited descriptive work
- The gap framed as a decision gap, not only a method gap
- Economics / political-science / public-management strands each engaged where relevant
- Conflicting prior estimates named and the adjudication previewed
- Government/think-tank evidence acknowledged and differentiated
- Contribution stated in one sentence a non-specialist policymaker could repeat
Anti-patterns
- A literature wall organized by author rather than by what is known/unknown for the decision
- One-discipline framing that ignores the other APPAM audiences
- "No one has studied X" when descriptive or gray-literature work exists — engage it
- Burying the contribution; JPAM wants the decision-relevant gap up front
- Citing the policy as important without citing the evidence on whether it works
Sibling-venue positioning (do not mis-home the paper)
JPAM overlaps with several journals; positioning should make the cross-field, decision-oriented contribution explicit so the paper is clearly a JPAM paper, not a near-miss for a sibling:
| If the framing is purely… | The natural home is… | JPAM reframing |
|---|---|---|
| An economics-method or pure-estimation result | AEJ: Economic Policy / J. of Public Economics | foreground the policy decision + cost-benefit + distribution |
| Public-management / organizational theory | Public Administration Review / JPART | foreground the credibly identified program effect |
| A single-field behavioral result | a field journal | foreground the cross-disciplinary stake and scale-up relevance |
Calibration anchors (hedged)
- "First credible estimate" beats "first estimate" — JPAM rewards identification quality over novelty of the question alone.
- Engage the gray/government-report literature honestly; APPAM readers often know it well, and ignoring it reads as unfamiliarity with the policy record.
- A contribution a policymaker can restate in one sentence travels better through a cross-disciplinary referee pool than one phrased only in a subfield's idiom.
Output format
【Policy-evidence base】current best causal estimate(s) + credibility
【Gap (as a decision)】what a policymaker still needs to know
【Cross-field strands】econ / PS / PA literatures engaged
【Conflicts adjudicated】how this paper resolves contested estimates
【Contribution (one sentence)】decision-relevant claim
【Next】jpam-theory-building
Supplementary resources
../../resources/exemplars/library.md— verified JPAM papers showing cross-field positioning../../resources/official-source-map.md— JPAM scope and field coverage
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:53


