crim-theory-building
GitHub用于将犯罪学实证发现转化为理论贡献。通过明确因果机制、可观察含义及适用范围,将结果嵌入现有理论传统,区分组间与组内逻辑,确保研究具备领域级通用性而非仅针对特定样本。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill crim-theory-building -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "crim-theory-building",
"description": "Use when building the theoretical argument of a Criminology (ASC \/ Wiley) manuscript into a field-level contribution. Criminology rewards an explicit mechanism, scope conditions, and observable implications over a bare crime correlation, whether the work tests, extends, or adjudicates a criminological theory. Structures the argument; it does not run analyses."
}
Theory & Argument Building (crim-theory-building)
At Criminology a result is not a contribution until it is attached to a mechanism the field can use elsewhere. This skill turns crime findings into theory: explicit causal stories, scope conditions, and observable implications drawn from (or pushing against) the field's theoretical traditions.
When to trigger
- The empirics are strong but the "so what / why does crime behave this way" is thin
- A reviewer said the paper is "atheoretical," "ad hoc," or "just a finding"
- You need to state mechanisms, assumptions, and scope conditions explicitly
- You are extending or adjudicating between two criminological theories
Build the argument
- Concept. Define the key constructs precisely — offending vs. arrest, desistance vs. a lull, victimization vs. reporting, legitimacy vs. compliance. Distinguish each from its neighbors.
- Mechanism. The causal story: who does what, why, under what incentives, controls, opportunities, or strains. Make it a process, not a regression coefficient.
- Observable implications. What we should see if the mechanism operates — and what we should not
see. These become the tests in
crim-research-design(e.g., a within-individual change in offending following a turning point; displacement vs. diffusion around a hot spot). - Scope conditions. Where the argument holds and where it does not — by age, offense type, developmental stage, place, or institutional context. Portability ≠ universality.
Engage the theoretical tradition (the Criminology move)
- Locate the argument in a recognizable theory (control, social learning, strain/GST, routine activity/opportunity, life-course/age-graded informal social control, labeling, deterrence, procedural justice, social disorganization/collective efficacy) — or say plainly how it revises one.
- Adjudicate where you can: state what your argument predicts that the leading rival theory does
not, so the test in
crim-research-designcan separate them. - Distinguish between- vs. within-person logics explicitly — many criminology theories live or die on whether the effect is a stable trait or a within-individual change.
The "portability" test (Criminology-specific)
Ask: Could a criminologist working on a different offense, age group, or setting import this
mechanism? If yes, you have a field-level contribution. If it only works for your exact sample,
tighten it into a general logic or reframe (back to crim-topic-selection).
Anti-patterns
- "Hypothesizing after results are known" (HARKing) — state theory before tests; preregister where possible
- Naming a theory in the intro but never deriving a testable implication from it
- Conflating between-person association with within-person change
- Universal claims with no scope conditions (e.g., "deterrence works") with no offense/context limits
- Burying the mechanism under the regression tables
What "engaging the theory" means to an ASC reviewer (calibration grid)
Criminology, the flagship of the American Society of Criminology, sits in a theory-testing tradition: a result earns the venue only when it does work on a theory. Reviewers grade engagement on a ladder. Aim for the top two rungs; the bottom two draw the "atheoretical / theory invoked, not tested" critique.
| Engagement level | What the manuscript does | Reviewer verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Decorative | names a theory in the intro, never returns | "theory invoked, not tested" |
| Illustrative | findings "consistent with" a theory, no rival | weak — correlation dressed as theory |
| Test | one prediction the theory makes that a named rival does not | a contribution |
| Adjudicate / revise | data separate two theories, or amend scope conditions | flagship-level |
Worked vignette: from finding to mechanism (illustrative)
A study finds youth in high-collective-efficacy neighborhoods self-report about 25% less violence (illustrative). Decorative use stops there. The Criminology move: name the mechanism (informal social control — adults intervening on behavior), derive an observable a social-disorganization rival denies (the gap shrinks once residential stability is held within-neighborhood over time), and bound the scope (collective efficacy bites on expressive, not instrumental, crime). That converts a 25% correlation into a portable, testable claim.
Theory-side referee pushback (with the Criminology fix)
- "Theory invoked, not tested." Fix: derive one observable the theory implies and a rival denies.
- "Mechanism versus correlation." Fix: specify the behavioral process and within-person observable, not the coefficient sign.
- "No scope conditions." Fix: bound the claim by age, offense type, developmental stage, or place.
Output format
【Core claim】one sentence
【Tradition】theory engaged / extended / adjudicated
【Mechanism】the causal/behavioral story
【Observable implications】testable consequences (incl. within-person) → research-design
【Scope conditions】where it holds / fails (age, offense, place, context)
【Portability】who else in criminology can use this argument
【Next】crim-research-design
Supplementary resources
../../resources/external_tools.md— life-course and longitudinal data for testing mechanisms../../resources/official-source-map.md— Criminology scope and theory-forward expectations
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:49


