arsoc-proposal-and-commissioning
GitHub指导如何向年度社会学评论(ARSoc)编辑委员会提案或接受委托。强调该期刊为邀稿制,不接受未约请的成品稿件。提供撰写委员会就绪主题提案的结构与策略,旨在提高获得选题邀请的概率。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill arsoc-proposal-and-commissioning -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "arsoc-proposal-and-commissioning",
"description": "Use when getting a review topic in front of the Annual Review of Sociology (ARSoc) Editorial Committee or shaping an accepted invitation — the invited\/commissioning intake route, how to suggest a topic, and what a Committee-ready pitch contains. Frames the commission; it does not gather the literature (arsoc-literature-synthesis) or run the delivery preflight (arsoc-submission)."
}
Invitation & Commissioning (arsoc-proposal-and-commissioning)
When to trigger
- The topic passed
arsoc-topic-selectionand you want it considered for an ARSoc volume - You received an invitation from the Editorial Committee and need to lock the angle before reading
- You are unsure how ARSoc intake works — it is not a portal you submit a finished paper to
- You want to maximize the chance the Committee commissions you for this topic
How ARSoc intake actually works (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准)
This is the single most important difference from a normal journal — get it right or you waste months. ARSoc is commissioning-driven:
- The Editorial Committee invites articles. The Committee — an editor (检索于 2026-06:co-editors Douglas Massey & Mary C. Waters;以官网为准), associate editors, regular members, and occasional guest editors — determines which topics each volume should include and solicits reviews from highly qualified authors, then assesses submitted manuscripts for accuracy, rigor, and balance (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准).
- Unsolicited finished manuscripts are not accepted. You do not write the full review and submit it cold the way you would to ASR or AJS (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准). The leverage point is getting your topic and your name onto the Committee's radar, not polishing a finished draft no one asked for.
- Suggesting a topic is the controllable move. Annual Reviews invites topic and author suggestions; the Committee evaluates proposed topics with the same rigor as any commissioned article (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准). Even when a Committee member is proposed to write an invited article, the suggestion is discussed and vetted like any other. So your realistic path is a sharp, short pitch — via the journal's suggestion channel or an editor/Committee member you know — that demonstrates the topic is ARSoc-shaped and that you are the right author.
- After an invitation, scope is negotiated with the editor/Committee before you draft (see
arsoc-editor-strategy).
Because you cannot manufacture an invitation, the closest controllable substitute is a one-to-two-page topic pitch that reads like the Committee's own reasoning: here is a subfield that has matured, here is why a sociologist in an adjacent area needs a map of it now, here is the spine I would impose, and here is why I can review it fairly. Put your name in front of the Committee as the person who could write that review.
Anatomy of a Committee-ready topic pitch
| Element | What it must do | Length guide |
|---|---|---|
| The subfield & animating question | State the literature and the question about it (from arsoc-topic-selection) |
~1 paragraph |
| Why a synthesis is needed now | New evidence / method turn / policy salience; the cross-subfield payoff | ~1 paragraph |
| The organizing spine | The taxonomy or analytical structure you would impose — not a chapter list | ~2–3 paragraphs |
| Coverage signal | The main research lines and theoretical traditions you would weigh (breadth evidence) | a curated list |
| Provisional conclusions | Your read of what the area has settled and the open questions / forward agenda (the payoff) | ~1 paragraph |
| Your standing & balance | Why you can review this fairly, and how you will handle your own work even-handedly | ~2 sentences |
Checklist
- You understand ARSoc is invited — you are pitching a topic, not submitting a finished paper
- The pitch states the contents, why cross-subfield sociologists will care, and the traditions you would weigh
- It leads with an organizing spine, not a table of contents
- It demonstrates command of the literature (the reference signal shows breadth across schools)
- It names the provisional conclusions and a forward research agenda (so the Committee sees a payoff)
- It addresses balance, especially if you are a contributor to the subfield
- You have identified the right channel (suggestion form / known editor / Committee contact) and confirmed it on the official page (volatile)
- If already invited: scope/angle confirmed with the editor before heavy reading (
arsoc-editor-strategy)
Anti-patterns
- Writing a full-length draft and trying to submit it cold — ARSoc does not take unsolicited manuscripts
- A pitch that is a topic outline ("Section 3 will discuss X") with no analytical spine
- A reference list that is a literature dump rather than evidence of a curated, weighable corpus
- Promising "comprehensive coverage" with no statement of what the review will conclude or where the field should go next
- Asserting editor names / Committee contacts / process from memory instead of the live Annual Reviews page
- Treating an invitation as a blank check — scope is still negotiated, and a review cannot grow without bound
Output format
【Subfield & question】<one sentence>
【Why now】<new evidence / method turn / policy salience>
【Proposed spine】<the organizing framework in 2–3 sentences>
【Coverage signal】<research lines + theoretical traditions signalling breadth>
【Provisional conclusions + agenda】<what the review will argue and where the field should go>
【Route】topic suggestion / known-editor contact / accepted invitation
【Balance note】<how the author's own work is handled>
【Source status】Committee process / contact re-confirmed on Annual Reviews page? Y/N · 待核实
【Next step】→ arsoc-literature-synthesis (begin systematic reading) after the invitation
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:25


