pubar-theory-building
GitHub用于将实证发现转化为公共行政理论贡献。明确机制、边界条件及实践启示,通过可迁移性和管理杠杆双重测试,构建符合PAR期刊要求的理论论证与“实践证据”板块。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill pubar-theory-building -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "pubar-theory-building",
"description": "Use when building the theoretical argument of a Public Administration Review (PAR) manuscript into a contribution that advances public-management theory and informs practice. PAR rewards a clear, portable mechanism with explicit scope conditions plus a defensible practitioner \"so-what.\" Structures the argument; it does not run analyses."
}
Theory & Argument Building (pubar-theory-building)
At PAR a result is not a contribution until it is attached to an argument public-management scholars can use elsewhere and a practical implication a manager can act on. This skill turns findings into theory: explicit mechanisms, scope conditions, and observable implications — in the idiom of public administration, where context (institutions, law, political control, public values) is central.
When to trigger
- The empirics are strong but the "so what / why" is thin
- A reviewer said the paper is "atheoretical," "ad hoc," or "just a program description"
- You need to state mechanisms, assumptions, and scope conditions explicitly
- A Conceptualizing Public Administration thought piece (theory is the whole contribution)
Build the argument (by mode of work)
Empirical paper with a theory
- Concept — define the key constructs precisely (e.g., red tape, goal ambiguity, PSM, network integration); distinguish from neighbors and from informal usage.
- Mechanism — the behavioral/organizational story: which actor (bureaucrat, manager, citizen, politician) does what, under which incentives, constraints, and public-sector context.
- Observable implications — what we should see if the mechanism operates (and what we should
not see). These become the tests in
pubar-research-design. - Scope conditions — which governance level, sector, or institutional setting the argument holds in. Portability ≠ universality; public-sector context is a feature, not noise.
Conceptual / theory piece (Conceptualizing PA)
- State the field-level problem the concept addresses before the synthesis.
- Build the argument through reasoning and the literature, not hypotheses; engage the strongest counter-view and rival framings.
- Show what the reframing lets the field see, measure, or manage that it could not before.
The dual test (PAR-specific)
Ask two questions:
- Portability — Could a scholar in another PA subfield import this mechanism/concept? If only
your exact case works, tighten it into a general logic or reframe (back to
pubar-topic-selection). - Practice — Can the mechanism be stated as something a manager could change? If the mechanism has no managerial lever, the Evidence for Practice points will ring hollow.
The "Evidence for Practice" box (a PAR signature requirement)
PAR asks empirical articles to carry an Evidence for Practice box — a short bulleted list (typically 3–5 points) of what the findings mean for those who run public organizations. Editors and reviewers treat it as a checked contribution element, not decoration, so build it from the mechanism, not as an afterthought:
- One actionable bullet per implication; lead with the action, not the finding ("Protect frontline discretion when…", not "We found discretion matters").
- Trace each bullet to the mechanism so a reviewer can follow bullet → lever → evidence; if a bullet has no antecedent mechanism, it is decorative and will be cut.
- Calibrate certainty to the design — an observational association is not a causal lever; hedge honestly and stay inside the scope conditions ("in turbulent environments," not "everywhere").
- Address the right actor and level — frontline supervisor vs. agency head vs. oversight body; a lever only one of them controls should name that actor.
- Avoid generic exhortation ("managers should pay attention to X"); say what to do differently.
Position within PAR's live theory conversations
A contribution lands when it advances a recognized public-administration conversation rather than a private vocabulary. Name and engage the relevant tradition, and say what your mechanism adds or revises:
- Behavioral / individual level — public service motivation (PSM), red tape and administrative burden, goal ambiguity, representative bureaucracy at the street level.
- Organizational / political level — bureaucratic discretion, political control of agencies, performance management and accountability regimes.
- Institutional / values level — public values and public-value creation, equity and procedural justice, legitimacy.
- System / network level — collaborative governance, networks, co-production, and reform paradigms (NPM, post-NPM, digital-era / AI-era governance).
"Context as a feature, not noise" means stating which of these settings your scope conditions invoke, and (for the strongest papers) bridging two levels with an explicit cross-level logic.
Anti-patterns
- "Hypothesizing after results are known" (HARKing) — state theory before tests; preregister where possible
- A mechanism named but never made observable
- Universal claims with no scope conditions, ignoring public-sector context
- A practitioner "so-what" that does not follow from the mechanism (decorative Evidence for Practice)
- Burying the argument under the empirics — the contribution paragraph must state it plainly
Worked micro-example (before → after)
Before (thin): "We find that managerial networking is positively associated with school district performance. Managers should network more." — an association plus a generic exhortation; no mechanism, no scope, decorative practice point.
After (PAR-grade):
- Mechanism — external networking lets public managers buffer environmental shocks and import resources and legitimacy; the managerial lever is how the manager allocates time between external and internal management.
- Observable implications — performance gains concentrate where environmental turbulence is high and slack is low, and are absent where the task environment is stable (a test, and a placebo).
- Scope conditions — local service agencies whose managers hold discretion over external engagement; the logic weakens under tight central control.
- Portability — any PA subfield where managers mediate an organization–environment boundary can import the time-allocation lever.
- Practice so-what (Evidence for Practice seed) — "In turbulent environments, protect managers' time for external engagement; in stable environments, redirect that time to internal management."
The "after" version is portable and gives a manager something to change — both arms of the dual test.
Output format
【Core claim】one sentence
【Mechanism】the behavioral/organizational story + the managerial lever
【Observable implications】testable consequences → research-design
【Scope conditions】which level / sector / institutional setting
【Portability】who else in PA can use this argument
【Practice so-what】the Evidence-for-Practice seed
【Next】pubar-research-design
Supplementary resources
../../resources/external_tools.md— measurement and analysis tooling../../resources/official-source-map.md— PAR scope and contribution expectations
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:16


