jeem-topic-selection
GitHub用于评估环境经济学与管理期刊(JEEM)稿件选题适配性。确认环境机制为核心贡献,通过福利/政策相关性、方法严谨性及学科匹配度测试,避免仅具数据或通用微观结果的论文被拒。
触发场景
安装
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jeem-topic-selection -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jeem-topic-selection",
"description": "Use when scoping or scope-testing a Journal of Environmental Economics and Management (JEEM) manuscript — confirming the environmental\/resource mechanism is load-bearing and the question clears the field-journal bar before any analysis is finalized. Decides fit and routes; it does not invent evidence or citations."
}
Topic Selection (jeem-topic-selection)
When to trigger
- The paper is aimed at JEEM and you are not sure the environmental or resource mechanism is doing the work versus being a label on a generic applied-micro result
- A coauthor asks "is this JEEM, JAERE, JPubE, AEJ: Policy, or Ecological Economics?"
- The result is interesting but the policy or welfare stakes are not articulated
- The paper is a method/valuation exercise and you must show it speaks to a substantive environmental question, not just a technique
Data first or question first
Environmental economics is data-rich — satellite imagery, sensor networks, administrative permit registries, parcel records — and that abundance tempts a "we have a great dataset, what can we estimate?" approach. JEEM rewards the reverse: a sharp environmental-economic question that the data then answer. A novel dataset is an asset only if it identifies a welfare-relevant parameter the field wants; on its own it is a desk-reject risk ("interesting data, no contribution"). Before committing, write the one-sentence question and the regulator-usable number it targets, then ask whether the data identify it — not the other way around.
The JEEM fit test
JEEM is a field journal: the environmental, resource, or climate content is the point, and the economics must be credible. A paper passes the fit test only if the environmental mechanism is necessary to the contribution — remove it and the paper collapses. Run the question through these gates in order:
- Is the object environmental/resource-economic? pollution & climate, energy, water, fisheries/forests/land, ecosystem services, environmental regulation & permits, or the nonmarket value of an environmental good. If the externality or resource is just a setting for a labor/IO/public-finance result, JEEM is the wrong field journal.
- Is there a welfare or policy stake? JEEM rewards numbers a regulator could use — a marginal damage, a willingness-to-pay, a compliance cost, an abatement-cost curve, a resource rent. "X correlates with pollution" is not a JEEM contribution; "the marginal external cost of X is $Y, so the efficient tax is Z" is.
- Does the method clear the bar for its branch? A causal claim needs a real design (not OLS + controls); a valuation needs a defensible preference-recovery argument; a theory paper needs a comparative static that bites.
Branch-specific scoping
| Archetype | What makes it a JEEM paper | What makes it a desk-reject |
|---|---|---|
| Environmental-policy causal | a regulation/permit-market/standard generates clean variation; welfare or compliance-cost interpretation | reduced-form correlation with no design; environment is incidental |
| Revealed-preference valuation | hedonic/travel-cost recovers a WTP for a defined environmental amenity | a house-price regression with no amenity/welfare claim |
| Stated-preference valuation | CV/DCE elicits WTP for a policy-relevant good with credible survey design | a survey with no incentive compatibility or scope test |
| Resource/pollution theory | a model yields a testable or policy-relevant prediction about resource use or abatement | math with no environmental comparative static or empirical hook |
| Climate / damages | weather/climate variation maps to an economic outcome and adaptation margin | a climate-impacts paper with no economics (belongs in a science journal) |
Sibling boundaries (be explicit in the paper)
- vs. JAERE — AERE's own journal and the closest substitute; JEEM is the older Elsevier flagship. Position on contribution, not prestige; do not claim "AERE official journal" status without checking current ownership (待核实).
- vs. AEJ: Economic Policy / JPubE — those reward the general policy/public-finance contribution; JEEM rewards the environmental mechanism and field audience.
- vs. Ecological Economics — that journal is pluralist/interdisciplinary; JEEM is neoclassical welfare economics.
- vs. Nature Climate Change — that is a science venue; JEEM needs the economics (preferences, welfare, optimization), not just an impact estimate.
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A team has clean administrative data on a firm subsidy and finds it raised employment. They want to submit to JEEM because the firms happen to be in renewable energy. Run the fit test: the object is a labor/IO subsidy effect, the welfare stake is jobs not an environmental externality, and the environmental mechanism is not load-bearing — strip out "renewable" and the paper is unchanged. Verdict: reroute to a public-finance or labor venue. Contrast a version that estimates how the subsidy changed abatement and emissions, recovers the implied cost per ton of CO2 abated, and compares it to the social cost of carbon — now the environmental mechanism carries the contribution and a regulator-usable number emerges. That version is a JEEM paper.
Short-paper route
JEEM accepts short papers / notes that make a contribution comparable to a full paper, with expedited review (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准; exact word ceiling 待核实). This route fits a sharp, single-result environmental contribution: a clean new estimate of one parameter, a decisive robustness correction to a published result, or a focused methodological note for valuation. If the contribution is one crisp number rather than a multi-part argument, scope it as a short paper rather than padding it to full length.
The desk-reject self-test
Before investing, simulate the editor's scope screen with three blunt questions. (1) If I deleted the word "environmental/climate/pollution" from the title and abstract, would the paper still make sense as a labor/IO/public-finance paper? If yes, the mechanism is not load-bearing — reroute. (2) Can I state a number a regulator could use (a damage, a WTP, an abatement cost, a quota)? If no, there is no welfare contribution yet. (3) Is there a recent JEEM or JAERE paper a referee would say I am merely re-running on new data? If yes, find what I fix. Passing all three is the minimum bar before topic selection is settled.
Checklist
- One sentence states the environmental/resource object and why it matters for policy or welfare
- Removing the environmental mechanism would collapse the contribution (it is load-bearing)
- The branch is named (policy-causal / RP valuation / SP valuation / theory / climate) and its method bar is met
- A regulator-usable parameter (damage, WTP, abatement cost, rent, elasticity) is the target, not a bare correlation
- The paper distinguishes itself from JAERE and from the general-interest / interdisciplinary siblings
- Short-paper route considered if the contribution is sharp but narrow (JEEM accepts short papers / notes)
- Process facts cited are in
resources/official-source-map.mdor marked 待核实
Anti-patterns
- "Environmental" as a setting, not a mechanism — a generic DiD that happens to use a green outcome
- Estimating an effect with no welfare interpretation and no number a policymaker could use
- Picking JEEM for prestige when the audience is really public finance or development
- A pure climate-science impact paper with no economic model of behavior or welfare
- Asserting JEEM is "the AERE official journal" without verifying current ownership (待核实)
Timeliness without chasing headlines
JEEM rewards questions that matter for current environmental policy — carbon pricing, air-quality regulation, water and fisheries management, climate adaptation, the energy transition — but it is a welfare-economics journal, not a news outlet. A topic earns durability when it pins down a parameter or mechanism that remains useful after the specific policy episode passes: the marginal damage of a pollutant, the WTP for an ecosystem service, the abatement-cost response to a price signal. Choose a question whose answer a regulator could cite in five years, not one that depends entirely on a fleeting policy debate. The best JEEM topics pair a salient policy context with a parameter of lasting interest.
Output format
【Journal】Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
【Skill】jeem-topic-selection
【Verdict】pass / revise / reroute
【Environmental mechanism】is it load-bearing? [Y/N] — one sentence
【Branch】policy-causal / RP-valuation / SP-valuation / theory / climate
【Policy-relevant target】damage / WTP / abatement cost / rent / elasticity
【Sibling boundary】why JEEM not JAERE / JPubE / Ecological Economics
【Source status】verified URL / 待核实 / not asserted
【Next skill】jeem-literature-positioning
版本历史
- 1839142 当前 2026-07-05 13:37


