name: sf-literature-positioning description: Use when positioning a Social Forces (SF) manuscript against the literature so it reads as a contribution to a general social-science audience. Because SF caps the manuscript at 10,000 words including the reference list, positioning must be sharp and economical. Stakes the contribution; it does not write the lit review.
Literature Positioning (sf-literature-positioning)
Social Forces reaches a general social-science readership, so positioning has two jobs: convince a specialist you know the frontier, and convince a non-specialist the debate matters. And because the 10,000-word cap counts the reference list, you cannot bury the contribution under a citation pile — positioning at SF is necessarily lean.
When to trigger
- Drafting or revising the introduction and the "contribution" paragraph
- A reviewer said you "missed obvious work" or "don't engage the debate"
- Your subfield literature is solid but the paper doesn't connect to broader social science
- You need to distinguish your contribution from the closest prior papers — economically
How SF wants the literature engaged
- Engage a debate, not a bibliography. Identify the live disagreement or open question your paper speaks to; cite the works that define it. Long reference lists cost you words you cannot spare.
- Two audiences at once. Satisfy the specialist (you know the frontier) and the generalist (why it matters for understanding social organization, institutions, or change).
- Name the gap precisely. Not "little is known" — say what is contested, mismeasured, under-theorized, or untested, and why resolving it advances social science.
- Position the contribution as a move in the debate. "Prior work argues X via mechanism M; we show M is conditional on C / is better explained by M′ / does not survive a sharper test."
- Pre-empt the strongest rival. SF reviewers prize rigor; name the leading alternative account and
say how your design adjudicates it (hand off to
sf-research-design).
Cite economically (the cap counts references)
| Tempting habit | Leaner SF move |
|---|---|
| Five citations to make one point | one or two definitive cites |
| A paragraph cataloguing every prior study | a sentence naming the debate + its anchors |
| Re-citing the same work in every section | cite once where it does the most work |
| A "gap" built from many small omissions | one precise, consequential gap |
Anti-patterns
- A "literature dump" with no organizing debate (and a reference list that eats the word budget)
- Engaging only your own subfield when SF readers span the social sciences
- Strawmanning prior work, or hiding the closest competitor paper
- Self-citation that breaks anonymity (SF is double-anonymized — see
sf-submission) - "First to study" claims when the contribution is incremental
What SF editors and referees expect from positioning
Social Forces, a long-standing flagship general sociology journal published by Oxford University Press for the Southern Sociological Society, draws referees across stratification, demography, work, family, culture, networks, and religion. A positioning section passes this gate:
| Referee question | Passing answer at SF | Early-decline signal |
|---|---|---|
| What debate does this enter? | One named disagreement with 3-5 anchor cites | A bibliography with no tension |
| Why should a non-specialist care? | General-sociology stakes in one sentence | "Important for [narrow subfield]" only |
| What is the precise gap? | A contested or mis-tested claim | "Has not been studied in [setting]" |
| Who is the closest rival? | Named, engaged, out-argued | The nearest competitor is invisible |
Calibration (hedged): SF sits a notch broader and less theory-maximalist than AJS or ASR — it rewards a methodologically solid, clearly-framed contribution over a sweeping theoretical statement, though the general-significance bar is still real.
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A panel study of educational stratification finds first-generation students at broad-access colleges close about 30% of the completion gap (illustrative) when structured advising is present. Weak: "Few studies examine advising at broad-access colleges." SF-grade: "The reproduction literature treats institutional sorting as the binding constraint on first-gen attainment (anchors); we show advising is partly substitutable for selectivity, reframing whether 'where you enroll' or 'how you are supported' carries the mobility effect." That enters a debate, names the rival (pure-sorting account), and states the general-sociology stakes.
Referee-pushback patterns and the SF fix
- "Solid empirics, thin sociological payoff" → recast the finding as a move in a named mobility debate.
- "You missed obvious work" → add the anchors that define the debate, not a citation wall.
Output format
【Debate】the live disagreement / open question
【Key works】the 3-5 that define it (cite economically)
【Gap】what is contested / mismeasured / untested
【Move】how this paper changes the debate
【Strongest rival】and how the design will adjudicate it
【Reference budget】citation load consistent with a 10,000-word (incl. refs) cap? [Y/N]
【Next】sf-theory-building
Supplementary resources
../../resources/official-source-map.md— SF general audience, scope, and the reference-inclusive word cap