---
name: amj-literature-positioning
description: Use when the front end of an Academy of Management Journal (AMJ) manuscript needs to engage the right literatures and stake a clear position in an ongoing theoretical conversation. Positions the paper among theories; it does not derive the hypotheses (amj-theory-development) or write the contribution paragraph (amj-contribution-framing).
---

# Literature Positioning (amj-literature-positioning)

## When to trigger

- The introduction reads as "no one has studied X" (gap-spotting) rather than joining a debate
- The literature review is an annotated list of prior findings, not an argument
- Canonical theoretical works in the focal domain are missing or cited only in passing
- You are unsure which conversation the paper enters and which scholars are the audience
- A reviewer says "I don't see how this advances the literature" or "this misreads prior work"

## The positioning move AMJ rewards

AMJ papers join an **ongoing theoretical conversation** and change it. The front end should name the conversation, show the unresolved tension or contradiction in it, and signal how this study resolves or extends it. "Gap-spotting" — pointing to an empty cell in a table of prior studies — is treated as a weak motivation; AMJ wants a *problematization*: surfacing and challenging an assumption the literature has taken for granted (Alvesson & Sandberg's problematization argument is the standard reference for this move). AMJ's *From the Editors* editorials repeatedly press the "so what?" and "who cares?" tests — your positioning must make the contribution matter to the broad management readership, not only a niche.

## Three legitimate motivating moves

1. **Tension between theories** — two literatures predict opposite things; your study adjudicates.
2. **Boundary/contingency** — an established effect should not hold (or should reverse) under a condition the literature has overlooked, for a theoretical reason.
3. **Problematization** — an assumption underlying a literature is questionable; relaxing it changes predictions.

A bare "gap" (no study has done X) is *not* on this list unless you supply the theoretical reason the gap matters.

## Engaging the literatures

- Identify the **focal literature** (the conversation you join) and any **supporting literatures** (the lens or mechanism you import). Keep them distinct.
- Cite the canonical theoretical works that define the focal construct/theory, plus recent papers that show the conversation is live — favor AMJ and its AOM sister journals (AMR for the theory side, AMD for emerging phenomena) and, where the conversation spans them, ASQ and SMJ.
- Review *to build your argument*, not to catalog: each cited stream should end with the tension your study addresses.
- Place the paper relative to the closest 2–3 prior studies and say precisely how yours differs in mechanism, level, boundary, or design — not merely in context.

## Front-end structure

A typical AMJ introduction: (1) hook the phenomenon, (2) name the conversation and the tension, (3) state the research question, (4) preview the theoretical approach and study, (5) state the intended contribution. The literature review/theory section then develops the streams in the order the hypotheses need them.

## Checklist

- [ ] The introduction names a specific theoretical conversation, not an empty cell
- [ ] Motivation is a tension, boundary, or problematization — not bare gap-spotting
- [ ] Canonical theoretical works defining the focal construct are cited and used
- [ ] Recent AMJ/AMR/ASQ/SMJ papers establish the conversation is current
- [ ] Closest 2–3 prior studies are named with a precise statement of how this paper differs
- [ ] Each literature stream ends pointing at the tension this study resolves
- [ ] The intended audience (division/scholars) is clear from the framing

## Anti-patterns

- **Gap-spotting**: "No prior work has examined X in Y" as the sole motivation.
- **Citation dump**: long lists of "(Author, year; Author, year)" with no argumentative thread.
- **Misreading prior work**: mischaracterizing a cited study (reviewers are often its authors).
- **Context-only novelty**: claiming contribution because the setting is new, not the mechanism.
- **Burying the focal theory**: the lens you actually use appears only in the methods.
- **Ignoring the obvious rival literature**: a reviewer's first move is to name the stream you skipped.

## Output format

```
【Focal conversation】the literature/theory you join ...
【Motivating move】tension / boundary / problematization (state it)
【Supporting literatures】lens or mechanism imported ...
【Canonical works engaged】[...]
【Closest prior studies】[...] — how this paper differs: ...
【Audience】division / scholars ...
【Next step】amj-methods (match design to the question)
```
