proghg-topic-selection
GitHub评估人类地理学辩论是否适合SAGE旗下PiHG期刊。通过显著性、广泛重要性、批判性综合需求及非实证性四项测试,判断选题是否符合该刊综述标准,并决定后续流程或推荐其他发表渠道。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill proghg-topic-selection -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "proghg-topic-selection",
"description": "Use when judging whether a human-geography debate is a Progress in Human Geography (PiHG)-scale review topic — significant, contested, and genuinely in need of a critical, theoretically-informed synthesis — and framing the review's animating argument. Decides fit; it does not gather the literature (proghg-literature-synthesis) or pitch the editors (proghg-proposal-and-commissioning)."
}
Topic Selection for a PiHG Review (proghg-topic-selection)
When to trigger
- You have a candidate human-geography debate and need to know if it is "PiHG-shaped"
- A topic feels either too narrow (a single empirical question) or too sprawling (a whole field)
- You are deciding between PiHG and a sibling outlet (an Annals/Transactions empirical paper, Antipode, an area journal's review)
- The debate is young/fast-moving and you suspect it is not yet ready for a critical review
What PiHG is for
PiHG is SAGE's flagship review and state-of-the-art journal in human geography: critical reviews of current philosophical, conceptual, theoretical, topical, methodological, ethical, and political issues, plus commissioned progress reports surveying subfield development. The reader is a competent human geographer — an urban scholar reading the more-than-human review, a development geographer reading the economic-geography report — who wants to grasp the state of the art of an area, see it critically appraised, and learn where it is headed. PiHG does not publish original empirical results or detailed case studies (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准): the contribution is the critical synthesis and conceptual argument, never new data. That mandate, plus a tight word envelope (progress reports especially), sets the fit bar.
The four PiHG-fit tests
A topic belongs in PiHG when it passes all four. If it fails one, route accordingly.
- Significance / contestation. There is a live, consequential debate — competing theoretical positions, an unsettled concept, a methodological or political fault line — not a settled or merely technical question. PiHG thrives on the contested. (Fails → no debate to map; too settled.)
- Broad importance. The questions matter to human geographers generally, not only to a dozen specialists. PiHG serves the discipline; a review only its own niche could love belongs in a specialty outlet. (Fails → too niche.)
- Need for critical synthesis. A reader cannot currently get oriented and a critical appraisal does not yet exist — and a too-recent prior PiHG review or progress report on the same ground is a hard barrier. The value is the critical map and the conceptual argument, not the list. (Fails → already synthesized.)
- Conceptual, not empirical. The contribution is a critical/theoretical argument about a literature, deliverable without new data. If the payoff requires reporting original fieldwork or a case study, it is an empirical paper. (Fails → wrong venue: Annals/Transactions/area journal.)
Decision table
| Situation | Verdict | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Significant, contested, needs critical synthesis, conceptual not empirical | PiHG-shaped | → proghg-proposal-and-commissioning |
| Important but no live debate yet | Not yet | revisit when the field has matured/fractured |
| Significant but narrow / specialist-only | Wrong venue | a specialty journal's review section |
| You have original data/fieldwork/a case to report | Wrong venue | Annals of the AAG / Transactions of the IBG / an area journal |
| A politically-committed empirical-radical argument with original cases | Consider | Antipode (radical geography) — PiHG reviews radical work, it is not Antipode |
| A book-length exhaustive treatment | Wrong venue | a monograph or handbook chapter |
Framing the animating argument
A PiHG review is organized by an argument about the subfield, not by a topic label. Before approaching the editors, write one sentence of each:
- State-of-the-art question: "Where has the X debate got to, and how should we read it?"
- Why now: what makes a critical synthesis valuable now — a theoretical turn, a wave of new work, a methodological or political fault line, convergence or fracture.
- Reader payoff: what a geographer from an adjacent subfield can do after reading — enter the debate, teach it, see the conceptual stakes and the forward agenda.
Checklist
- The debate passes all four fit tests (significance/contestation, broad importance, need, conceptual-not-empirical)
- The animating argument about the subfield is written in one sentence
- The "why now" is concrete (theoretical turn / new work / political fault line), not "no one has reviewed this"
- The intended reader is the cross-subfield human geographer, and the payoff is stated
- You can name the 4–7 positions / traditions the review must engage (a coverage skeleton)
- Checked no too-recent prior PiHG review or progress report covers the same ground
- Checked it is not an Annals/Transactions empirical paper, an Antipode original-case piece, or a monograph
- You are not the subfield's only contributor — the review will not become a self-retrospective
Anti-patterns
- "No one has reviewed X" used as the sole justification — absence is not significance
- Reviewing your own research program under a neutral subfield title (self-promotion; PiHG punishes this)
- Smuggling an empirical paper in as a "review" — PiHG does not publish empirical results or detailed cases
- A scope so broad it becomes a monograph; so narrow it is a specialist-journal note
- Confusing "topic" (a label like "economic geography") with "animating argument" (what the review claims about the field's trajectory)
- Picking a debate so settled there is nothing to critically appraise
Output format
【Subfield / debate】<the literature / area>
【Four tests】significance-contestation / broad-importance / need / conceptual-not-empirical — pass or fail each
【Animating argument】"Where has ___ got to, and how should we read it?"
【Why now】<theoretical turn / new work / political fault line>
【Reader payoff】<what a cross-subfield geographer can do after reading>
【Coverage skeleton】<4–7 positions / traditions the review must engage>
【Verdict】PiHG-shaped / rescope / wrong-venue (→ Annals / Transactions / Antipode / monograph)
【Source status】verified URL / 待核实 / not asserted
【Next step】→ proghg-proposal-and-commissioning (choose commission vs. submission route)
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:14


