jue-literature-positioning
GitHub针对城市经济学论文,精准定位边际贡献。对比JUE及兄弟期刊,锚定具体文献脉络(如集聚、住房等),清晰陈述增量,区分方法与实质贡献,预判审稿异议,避免贡献模糊或重复已知理论。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jue-literature-positioning -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jue-literature-positioning",
"description": "Use when the contribution of a Journal of Urban Economics (JUE) manuscript relative to the urban-economics frontier is fuzzy or undersold. Stakes the marginal contribution against the right spatial literatures and the sibling journals; it does not design the identification or draft the prose."
}
Literature Positioning (jue-literature-positioning)
When to trigger
- The intro cites broadly but never says what is new relative to the urban-econ frontier
- A referee could say "this confirms what Rosen–Roback / spatial-equilibrium theory already implies"
- The contribution is buried under a generic "the literature has not examined city Y" claim
- You are unsure which strand (agglomeration, housing, sorting, transport, local public finance, place-based policy) you are actually contributing to
- The paper reads as adjacent to JUE — it could be sent to RSUE, JEG, or JPubE without changing a word
Position against the right spatial literature, not the world
JUE referees are urban economists; they know the canonical frames and will test whether you have advanced one. Anchor the contribution in the specific strand you move, then state the delta precisely.
| Strand | The frame referees hold | What counts as moving it |
|---|---|---|
| Agglomeration & productivity | Marshall (sharing/matching/learning); Combes–Gobillon density-wage elasticity; sorting vs true agglomeration | new source of exogenous density variation; decomposing sorting from spillovers; new mechanism |
| Spatial equilibrium | Rosen–Roback; amenity capitalization; Diamond-style sorting | a quantitatively new wedge, amenity, or constraint in the equilibrium |
| Housing supply & prices | Glaeser–Gyourko; Saiz supply elasticity; regulation/land use | new supply-constraint measurement; causal effect of regulation; capitalization design |
| Quantitative spatial models | Ahlfeldt–Redding–Sturm–Wolf; Allen–Arkolakis; market access | new data discipline on parameters; new counterfactual margin |
| Neighborhood effects & mobility | MTO; Chetty–Hendren place effects | new identification of place vs selection; new policy lever |
| Place-based policy | enterprise/opportunity zones; transport infrastructure | credible spillover-aware evaluation; welfare incidence |
| Local public finance | Tiebout sorting; capitalization of local taxes/services | new test of sorting; fiscal incidence in space |
Crafting the contribution paragraph
- Name the closest two or three papers in your strand and state precisely what each leaves open — not "they don't study city Y," but "they identify A under assumption B, which fails when C."
- State your delta in one sentence that an urban economist would recognize as a real advance (new variation, new mechanism, new data, decisive magnitude).
- Separate the spatial-design contribution from the substantive one. A clever boundary discontinuity is a methods contribution; a new agglomeration magnitude is substantive. Claim the one you actually deliver.
- Pre-empt the "theory already predicts this" objection by showing the sign was ambiguous ex ante or the magnitude was unknown and matters for policy.
Positioning against the quantitative-spatial turn
A reduced-form JUE paper increasingly has to speak to the quantitative-spatial-model (QSM) literature even when it does not estimate one. If your estimate is an elasticity or a magnitude that QSMs need as an input (migration, commuting, housing-supply, or agglomeration elasticity), say so — "our reduced-form estimate disciplines the [X] elasticity that ARSW-style models calibrate." This frames a clean reduced-form result as a contribution to structural work and widens the audience. Conversely, a QSM paper must position against the reduced-form estimates its parameters rest on, not only against other models.
Distinguishing JUE from its siblings in the intro
The "why JUE" question is a positioning task, not just a venue choice. One sentence in the introduction should make the fit obvious to the editor:
- vs RSUE / J. of Regional Science — lead with the economic mechanism and policy stake, not the spatial-econometric method.
- vs JEG (OUP) — frame in spatial-equilibrium / urban-economics terms (capitalization, sorting, agglomeration), not evolutionary or institutional economic geography.
- vs JPubE — center the spatial reallocation and capitalization, not the tax/spending instrument design.
- vs AEJ: Applied — keep the urban mechanism load-bearing; a clean design alone reads as a fit problem at JUE.
Cite the canon correctly — referees notice
Urban economists hold the field's foundational results precisely, and a miscited or misattributed canon erodes credibility on page one. Get the anchors right for your strand: Rosen and Roback for amenity capitalization in spatial equilibrium; Glaeser and Gyourko (with Saiz on supply elasticity) for housing supply constraints; Combes and Gobillon for the density-wage elasticity and the sorting-vs-agglomeration distinction; Ahlfeldt–Redding–Sturm–Wolf and Allen–Arkolakis for quantitative spatial models; Chetty–Hendren and the MTO literature for neighborhood effects. Engage these on their assumptions, not as decorative citations, and the urban-economics referee reads you as a member of the conversation.
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A paper estimates the effect of minimum-lot-size zoning on house prices. Weak positioning: "the literature has not studied lot-size zoning." Strong JUE positioning: anchor in Glaeser–Gyourko supply-constraint work and Saiz elasticities, state that prior work measures aggregate regulation indices while this paper isolates one regulatory margin with a boundary design, and note the estimated supply response disciplines the housing-supply elasticity used in spatial-equilibrium models. The delta — a causal, single-instrument estimate that feeds QSM calibration — is one an urban economist accepts as new.
Checklist
- The strand you contribute to is named, with its canonical anchors cited correctly
- The 2–3 closest papers are engaged on their assumptions/limits, not just listed
- The delta is one sentence an urban economist would accept as new
- Spatial-design novelty and substantive novelty are not conflated
- The "spatial-equilibrium theory already implies this" objection is anticipated
- Positioning makes clear why JUE and not RSUE / JEG / JPubE
- If reduced-form, the link to the QSM elasticity it disciplines is stated
- The literature is mapped as a frontier, not listed chronologically
Anti-patterns
- "No one has studied [this city/country]" offered as the contribution (setting ≠ contribution)
- Citing the agglomeration or housing canon without saying which assumption you relax
- Claiming a methods advance and a substance advance when the paper delivers only one
- Positioning so broadly the paper could go to any spatial journal — the JUE referee reads that as a fit problem
- Ignoring recent quantitative-spatial-model work when your reduced-form result speaks to it
- A literature section that is a chronological list rather than a map of the frontier you move
The contribution paragraph in practice
The single most-read positioning unit is the "contribution paragraph" near the end of the introduction. It should run: closest work and its limit → your variation/mechanism/data → the delta in one sentence → why it matters for cities. Keep it to one paragraph; a JUE referee who has to hunt across the intro for the contribution reads that as a sign the author is unsure what it is. Front the delta, not the apparatus.
Output format
【Strand】agglomeration / spatial-eqm / housing / QSM / neighborhood / place-based / local-public-finance
【Closest papers】2–3, with the specific limit each leaves open
【Delta】one sentence an urban economist accepts as new
【Novelty type】spatial design / substantive mechanism / data / magnitude
【Why JUE not sibling】one line
【Next skill】jue-identification
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:57


