popdevr-topic-selection
GitHub用于评估项目是否适合人口与发展评论期刊,并确定目标文章类型。通过检验人口-发展关联、跨领域兴趣、实质贡献及范围清晰度来压力测试选题契合度,辅助决定投稿的研究文章、注释或数据视角类型。
触发场景
安装
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill popdevr-topic-selection -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "popdevr-topic-selection",
"description": "Use when deciding whether a project fits Population and Development Review (PDR, Wiley \/ Population Council) and which article type to target. PDR sits at the intersection of demography and development, so the test is a population-change question tied to social, economic, or environmental change and policy — broad interest, not a narrow estimate. Helps frame the question; it does not collect data."
}
Topic Selection & Fit (popdevr-topic-selection)
PDR advances knowledge of the relationships between population and social, economic, and environmental change, and provides a forum for public-policy discussion of those relationships. The bar is not "I estimated a demographic rate"; it is "this illuminates how population dynamics and development interact, in a way that a broad readership cares about." Use this skill to pressure-test fit before you invest.
When to trigger
- Choosing among possible projects or framings for a PDR submission
- A colleague said the paper is "pure demography" or "a development paper that ignores population"
- Deciding between a Research Article, Notes & Commentary, and Data & Perspectives
- Unsure whether the contribution is a new estimate, a synthetic framework, or a policy reframing
The PDR fit test
A strong PDR paper usually clears all four:
- A population–development linkage. It connects a demographic process or outcome (fertility, mortality, migration, ageing, household/population structure) to social, economic, or environmental change — or to the policy that mediates them — not a topic that merely uses population data.
- Broad interest across fields. An economist, an environmental scholar, and a policy reader should each see why it matters; PDR's audience spans demography, economics, sociology, public health, and environment/climate, not one sub-discipline.
- A real contribution. A new estimate that revises the population-and-development record, a synthetic/conceptual framework that reorganizes a debate (PDR especially values these), a decomposition that isolates what drives a trend, or a policy-relevant mechanism.
- A clean, answerable scope. Sharp enough to argue convincingly within ~8,000–10,000 words for an Article, or much tighter for a Note.
Domain framing (connect population to development, not just your sub-area)
| Home domain | Reach population-and-development by… |
|---|---|
| Fertility / family | tie parity, timing, or union change to economic development, gender, or policy |
| Mortality / health | connect mortality or morbidity change to development, inequality, or health systems |
| Migration / urbanization | frame flows and urban growth as drivers/consequences of development |
| Ageing / population structure | link age structure (dividend, dependency) to growth, pensions, labor |
| Population & environment | connect population dynamics to climate, land, resources, vulnerability |
| Formal / conceptual | show which population-and-development debate the framework newly clarifies |
Article-type choice
- Research Article — full study or substantial synthetic essay; broad population-and-development claim; typically ~8,000–10,000 words.
- Notes & Commentary — one crisp argument, a focused finding, or a response on a current population question; short. Do not pad it into an Article.
- Data & Perspectives — a new dataset, indicator, or interpretation of population statistics that the
field should know about (route through
popdevr-data-analysis+popdevr-transparency-and-data).
Anti-patterns
- "First study of topic X in country Y" as the whole contribution (descriptive, narrow)
- A pure demographic estimation paper with no development, policy, or environment payoff (fits Demography / Population Studies better)
- A development or policy paper that invokes "population" rhetorically but asks no population question
- A method demonstration with no population-and-development substance
Desk-screen fit patterns (what the editors' first read rejects)
PDR editors and an editorial committee read every submission first; a paper can be declined before review for poor fit or low likelihood of favorable reviews. The usual triggers and the reframe:
| Desk-screen pattern | Why it fails the population-and-development test | Reframe toward fit |
|---|---|---|
| A clean causal estimate with demographic controls | The population process is a covariate, not the object | Make a population quantity the object and tie it to development/policy |
| A development-economics paper that mentions population | No population dynamic is theorized | Center a fertility/mortality/migration/ageing process and its development meaning |
| A single-country narrative with no broad hook | An environment or economics reader sees nothing | Connect to a general population-and-development debate or comparison |
| A polemical policy essay | Not grounded in population evidence or peer-reviewable | Anchor the argument in demographic evidence and the scholarly literature |
Worked fit check (illustrative vignette)
A researcher has census evidence that fertility fell fastest in districts that electrified earliest. Run the four-part test:
- Population–development linkage? Yes in potential — but as stated it is a fertility-and- infrastructure correlation. Reframe: ask how a development input (electrification) reshapes the timing and quantum of childbearing and what that implies for the demographic dividend (illustrative).
- Broad interest? After reframing, yes — economists and policy readers care about the dividend.
- Real contribution? A decomposition of fertility change into development-driven channels is a genuine population-and-development move.
- Answerable scope? Yes, as a Research Article on one country's transition.
Verdict: thin as a correlation, strong as a development-and-fertility-transition paper.
Output format
【Question】one sentence (population dynamics ↔ development/policy)
【Broad interest】which fields beyond your own care, and why
【Contribution type】estimate / synthetic framework / decomposition / policy mechanism / data
【Type】Research Article / Notes & Commentary / Data & Perspectives
【Fit verdict】strong / needs reframing / off-fit (why)
【Next】popdevr-literature-positioning
Supplementary resources
../../resources/external_tools.md— population + development data sources by domain../../resources/official-source-map.md— PDR aims, scope, and article types
版本历史
- 1839142 当前 2026-07-05 14:12


