arsoc-organizing-framework
GitHub为《社会学年度评论》构建分析框架,将文献转化为论点。适用于证据矩阵已建但缺乏逻辑主线、章节命名不当或无法概括核心观点的场景。通过设计分类法、机制或范式等‘脊柱’,解决文献罗列问题,确保结构严谨且具解释力。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill arsoc-organizing-framework -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "arsoc-organizing-framework",
"description": "Use when imposing an analytical structure or taxonomy on a sociology literature for an Annual Review of Sociology (ARSoc) review — the \"spine\" that turns a reading list into an argument about the subfield. Designs the framework; it does not gather the literature (arsoc-literature-synthesis) or judge balance (arsoc-comprehensiveness-and-balance)."
}
Organizing Framework — the Review's Spine (arsoc-organizing-framework)
When to trigger
- The evidence matrix is built but the draft would read like a list of studies
- Sections are named after methods or eras ("Quantitative studies", "Recent work") rather than ideas
- A reader could not predict what comes next or why studies are grouped as they are
- You cannot state in one sentence the argument the review makes about the subfield
Why the spine is the whole game at ARSoc
The single most-cited reason ARSoc reviews disappoint is that they are annotated bibliographies: study-after-study summaries with no organizing idea. A great ARSoc review imposes a structure the subfield did not have — a taxonomy, a unifying mechanism, a sequence of questions, or a simple analytic model — that makes scattered work legible to a sociologist from another area. The framework is the contribution; the citations are the evidence. Choose the spine deliberately:
| Spine type | Organizes the subfield by | Best when |
|---|---|---|
| Taxonomy | mutually-exclusive categories of mechanism / theoretical approach | the area is fragmented into incommensurable camps |
| Mechanism / process | the causal or social process linking inputs to outcomes | results disagree because they tap different stages of one process |
| Levels of analysis | micro / meso / macro, or individual / organizational / institutional | the field spans levels and the lesson is how they connect |
| Question sequence | a logical chain of sub-questions | the area has a natural "first we must know X, then Y" order |
| Paradigm / debate | rival theoretical traditions and what divides them | the contest of perspectives is itself the subfield's structure |
Pick one primary spine; a second axis can be a within-section ordering, but a review with two competing spines reads as two reviews.
The test of a good framework
- Exhaustive + exclusive (MECE-ish): every important study has exactly one natural home, and the categories do not bleed into each other.
- Generative: the framework predicts where gaps are — empty cells are open questions and the seeds of the forward agenda, not omissions.
- Reconciling: apparent contradictions in the literature become explained (studies disagree because they sit in different cells / different traditions / different levels of analysis).
- Portable: a sociologist from an adjacent subfield can restate the spine after one read and use it to slot a new study they encounter.
Stress-test by trying to place 5 hard cases (studies that resist categorization). If three of them have no home, the spine is wrong — redesign before drafting.
The framework is also what lets you be selective without being incomplete: once each cell is defined, confirmatory studies can be cited in clusters within their cell while the prose discusses only the cell-defining work. A review without a spine cannot do this — it must either summarize everything (bloat) or omit silently (gaps). Design the spine before you decide what to foreground, and note which cells are thin — those become the research agenda the ARSoc voice closes on.
Checklist
- One primary spine chosen (taxonomy / mechanism / levels / question-sequence / paradigm-debate)
- The review's one-sentence argument about the subfield is written
- Every category traces to evidence-matrix rows (no empty rhetorical buckets)
- The framework reconciles at least one apparent contradiction in the literature
- Empty/thin cells are surfaced as open questions feeding the forward agenda (generativity)
- 5 hard-case studies each have a natural home
- Section headings name ideas / mechanisms / traditions, not "quantitative vs. qualitative"
- A cross-subfield sociologist could restate the spine and slot a new study into it
Anti-patterns
- The annotated bibliography: study-by-study summaries with no organizing idea (the cardinal ARSoc sin)
- Sections named "Theory", "Methods", "Findings", "Other" — categories that carry no analytical content
- Organizing by method (quant section / qual section) instead of by idea — it hides the argument and silos the modes
- A taxonomy whose categories overlap so every study is cited three times in three places
- Two competing spines fighting for control of the same review
- A framework so bespoke only the author can apply it (not portable)
- Hiding the contribution: never stating, in one sentence, what the review argues about the subfield
Output format
【Spine type】taxonomy / mechanism / levels-of-analysis / question-sequence / paradigm-debate
【Argument about the subfield】"<one sentence the review makes>"
【Categories】<the cells / sub-questions, each MECE>
【Reconciliation】<which contradiction the framework explains>
【Open questions】<empty/thin cells surfaced as gaps for the forward agenda>
【Hard-case test】5 awkward studies each placed? Y/N
【Next step】→ arsoc-comprehensiveness-and-balance (fill cells fairly + even-handedly)
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:25


