---
name: amj-rebuttal
description: Use when drafting the revision and response letter after an Academy of Management Journal (AMJ) revise-and-resubmit — structuring point-by-point responses to the action editor and reviewers across a multi-round developmental process. Drafts the response after revisions; it does not interpret the decision letter (amj-review-process).
---

# R&R Response & Rebuttal (amj-rebuttal)

## When to trigger

- You received an AMJ R&R and have planned the revision (via `amj-review-process`)
- You have actually made (or scoped) the manuscript changes and need to write the response document
- You must reconcile conflicting reviewer demands for the action editor
- A later-round decision asks you to defend or further revise prior changes

> Write the response letter **after** revising the manuscript, not before. The letter documents changes you have made, not promises. AMJ's process is developmental and typically multi-round; resubmit the revised manuscript and response document through ScholarOne (mc.manuscriptcentral.com/AMJ), keeping the same action editor across rounds where possible, and remember the revised main body still must respect the **40-page limit** (text + references + appendices).

## Response-document structure

1. **Opening letter to the action editor.** Thank the editor and reviewers; summarize the most important changes in 2–4 sentences; explicitly state how you addressed the editor's stated priorities. Note where reviewers conflicted and how you resolved it.
2. **Per-reviewer sections.** For each reviewer, restate every comment verbatim (or faithfully numbered), then respond.
3. **Point-by-point format** for each comment:
   - **Comment** (quoted/numbered)
   - **Response** (what you did and the theoretical/methodological reasoning)
   - **Location** (section/page/table where the change appears)
   - Quote the new manuscript text where helpful.

## How to respond to AMJ's signature demands

- **"Deepen the theoretical contribution."** Strengthen the mechanism and the contribution sentences; show what the field now learns. Do not just add citations — revise the argument (see `amj-theory-development`, `amj-contribution-framing`).
- **"Strengthen the method / address endogeneity."** Add the identification strategy, robustness, or a supplementary study; report it and explain why it resolves the concern (see `amj-methods`, `amj-data-analysis`).
- **"Common-method bias."** Provide designed or additional evidence; if you cannot collect new data, give the strongest available statistical evidence and acknowledge residual risk as a boundary.
- **"Add a study."** If feasible, an experiment or replication that nails the mechanism is often the decisive move in the developmental process — but watch the 40-page budget: heavy new material often lives in an online supplement so the main body stays within limit.

## Tone and tactics

- **Be respectful and substantive.** Reviewers are colleagues investing in your paper; thank them and engage seriously, even when disagreeing.
- **Concede gracefully** where they are right; make the change.
- **Disagree with evidence, not assertion.** If you decline a request, give a theoretical or empirical reason and, where possible, an alternative analysis showing robustness.
- **Address every point.** Silent omissions read as evasion; a non-trivial point left unanswered can sink a revision.
- **Surface conflicts to the editor.** When reviewers ask for opposite things, explain the trade-off and your chosen resolution for the editor to adjudicate.
- **Keep it self-contained.** A reviewer should not have to hunt the manuscript to see what changed.

## Checklist

- [ ] Manuscript actually revised before the letter was written
- [ ] Editor's priorities addressed first and explicitly in the opening letter
- [ ] Every reviewer comment restated and answered (none skipped)
- [ ] Each response names the location of the change and quotes new text where useful
- [ ] Theory-contribution and method/endogeneity demands met with real changes, not citations only
- [ ] Declined requests are justified with evidence and, where possible, an alternative test
- [ ] Reviewer conflicts surfaced and resolved for the editor
- [ ] Tone is collegial and confident throughout

## Anti-patterns

- Writing the response before making the changes.
- Skipping or burying an inconvenient comment.
- Responding "we have added a citation" to a "deepen the theory" request.
- Defensive or dismissive tone toward reviewers.
- Declining a request with assertion ("we believe this is fine") and no evidence.
- Silently siding with one reviewer when two conflict, leaving the editor to discover it.

## Output format

```
【Decision round】1st R&R / 2nd round / ...
【Editor priorities addressed】1... 2... 3...
【Per-reviewer coverage】R1: x/x comments, R2: x/x, R3: x/x — all answered? yes/no
【Major changes】theory: ... method/data: ... new study: ...
【Declined requests + justification】[...]
【Reviewer conflicts resolved】...
【Response letter status】drafted / final
【Next step】resubmit via ScholarOne; on next decision → amj-review-process
```
