---
name: tar-literature-positioning
description: Use when the front end of a The Accounting Review (TAR) manuscript reads as gap-spotting or an incremental database extension — positioning the paper inside a live accounting conversation against the closest TAR/JAR/JAE/CAR work. Positions the contribution; it does not derive the mechanism (tar-theory-development) or write the contribution paragraph (tar-contribution-framing).
---

# Literature Positioning (tar-literature-positioning)

## When to trigger

- Your intro says "no prior study examines X" (gap-spotting) instead of joining a debate
- The paper looks like "Smith (2015) on a newer/bigger sample" with no new question
- You cite the foundational disclosure/audit/tax literature but do not engage its open tensions
- A reviewer says "incremental," "what is new relative to [closest paper]?", or "wrong conversation"

## What "positioning" means at TAR

TAR's bar is the **significance of the contribution to the accounting literature**, so positioning
is not a citation dump — it is showing which accounting conversation you advance and how. The strong
move is **problematization**: surface a tension, an unexplained result, or a maintained assumption in
the literature that your setting lets you resolve. A new shock, a richer dataset, or a cleaner
identification is valuable only insofar as it settles something the field actually disputes.

## Map the conversation, not just the topic

- **Name the focal stream** precisely (e.g., the disclosure–cost-of-capital debate; the
  audit-quality / fee literature; the real-effects-of-accounting literature; the tax-avoidance and
  reputational-cost literature; the earnings-management vs. earnings-informativeness debate).
- **Identify the 3–6 closest papers** — the ones a reviewer will say you must beat — and state what
  each found and where they disagree or stop.
- **Locate your paper** as resolving a specific tension, not filling a void: "Prior work finds both
  X and not-X; this setting isolates the condition under which X holds."

## Position against the right venue

The closest competing work often sits in JAR, JAE, Contemporary Accounting Research, or Review of
Accounting Studies as much as in TAR. Engage that work directly; do not pretend the conversation is
TAR-only. If the nearest neighbors are all in a finance journal, reconsider whether the accounting
construct is really central (see `tar-topic-selection`).

## Incremental-extension red flags

- The only novelty is a longer panel, a new country, or a newer database vintage.
- The contribution sentence could be written before seeing your results.
- You "extend" a paper without engaging why its limitation mattered.

## Checklist

- [ ] The focal accounting conversation is named, not just the topic
- [ ] The 3–6 nearest papers are engaged, including the single closest competitor
- [ ] The paper resolves a stated tension (problematization), not an asserted gap
- [ ] Competing findings in the literature are reconciled by your setting
- [ ] Positioning engages JAR/JAE/CAR/RAST neighbors, not only TAR
- [ ] The novelty is a new answer, not merely new data

## Anti-patterns

- **Gap-spotting**: "no one has studied X" as the whole justification.
- **Citation carpet**: listing thirty references without saying who disagrees with whom.
- **Straw-man neighbor**: misstating the closest paper to manufacture novelty.
- **Database extension**: same question, newer/bigger sample, no new insight.
- **Venue blindness**: ignoring that the real debate lives partly in JAR/JAE/CAR.

## Output format

```
【Focal conversation】... (disclosure / audit / tax / real effects / managerial)
【Closest competitors】1... 2... 3... (the must-beat paper: ...)
【Tension / problematization】the literature disputes ... ; this setting resolves ...
【Your position】not a gap — you settle ...
【Cross-venue neighbors engaged】JAR/JAE/CAR/RAST: ...
【Next step】tar-methods, then tar-contribution-framing
```
