| name | submission-disclosures |
| description | Generate the submission-time disclosure block for a manuscript — the AI-use disclosure statement matched to the target journal's policy, CRediT author-contribution roles, conflict-of-interest statement, and data-availability statement. Use when the user says "AI disclosure", "disclosure statement", "do I need to disclose Claude", "CRediT roles", "conflict of interest statement", "data availability statement", or is preparing a submission package. NOT statistical-disclosure screening of restricted-data outputs — that is /disclosure-check. |
| argument-hint | [manuscript path] [journal short-name, e.g. AER] [--no-ai | --statements-only] |
| allowed-tools | ["Read","Grep","Glob","Write","WebSearch","WebFetch"] |
| effort | medium |
/submission-disclosures — The Submission-Time Disclosure Block
Draft the four statements journals now require (or strongly expect) at submission, in one pass: AI-use disclosure, CRediT contributor roles, conflict-of-interest, and data availability. Journals tightened AI-use policies through 2025–2026; an undisclosed-AI finding at a top journal is now a research-integrity problem, not a formatting one — so the statement should be drafted deliberately, not improvised in the submission portal at midnight.
This skill is about the author's disclosures TO the journal. It is unrelated to /disclosure-check, which screens restricted-data outputs for statistical-disclosure risk (small cells, PII). Same word, different worlds.
When to use
- Preparing a submission or resubmission package and the portal asks for AI-use / COI / data-availability statements.
- A revise-and-resubmit at a journal that adopted an AI policy since the original submission.
- A coauthor asks "do we need to say we used Claude/Copilot/ChatGPT on this?"
Phases
Phase 1 — Resolve the journal's actual policy
- If a journal short-name is given, read its profile in
journal-profiles.md (top-5 econ + AEA-imprint policy notes + poli-sci top-3).
- Verify the current policy on the journal's own site (
WebSearch/WebFetch: " artificial intelligence policy authors", the journal's submission guidelines page). Policies moved fast in 2025–2026; a cached or remembered policy is not good enough for a submission. Record the URL and retrieval date in the output.
- If no explicit AI policy exists, default to the strictest common denominator (disclose tools, scope of use, and human responsibility) — over-disclosure is free; under-disclosure is not.
Phase 2 — Inventory what was actually used
Interview briefly (or infer from the repo when evident — e.g. quality_reports/, session logs, a CLAUDE.md):
- Which tools (Claude Code, Copilot, ChatGPT, Grammarly-class) and for what: writing/editing prose, code authoring, code review, literature search, data analysis, translation.
- What stayed human: research design, identification choices, interpretation, final verification of every number and citation (tie to the repo's own verification story —
/audit-reproducibility, /verify-claims — when true, say so: "all AI-assisted numbers were independently verified against code" is a strength, not a confession).
- What AI was NOT used for when the journal cares (e.g., most policies bar AI as a listed author and bar undisclosed AI-generated images/data).
Phase 3 — Draft the four statements
Write quality_reports/submission_disclosures_[manuscript-slug].md containing:
- AI-use disclosure — journal-matched wording: tools + versions, scope of use, the affirmation that authors take full responsibility for all content and verified all AI-assisted output. Honest and specific; never boilerplate that overclaims ("no AI was used") when the repo's own logs say otherwise.
- CRediT roles — the 14-role taxonomy mapped to each author (interview for the mapping; flag roles no author holds).
- Conflict-of-interest — funding sources, paid/unpaid positions, data-provider relationships (IRB/data-use agreements often constrain what must be stated; cross-ref
confidential-data.md).
- Data availability — aligned with the replication deposit: openICPSR/DCAS language when the target is an AEA-imprint journal (delegate the deposit itself to
/replication-package; restricted-data access language per confidential-data.md).
With --statements-only, emit the statements to chat without writing the file. With --no-ai, skip statement 1 (the user asserts no AI assistance — note in chat that the repo's own session logs may contradict this, if they visibly do).
Phase 4 — Parity check against the manuscript
Grep the manuscript for an existing acknowledgments/disclosure section; flag contradictions (e.g., the paper thanks "research assistance" that the COI omits, or an existing AI statement that the new one contradicts). Do not silently overwrite — surface the diff.
Exit behavior
- Statements drafted, policy verified: write the file, print the four statements + the policy URL/date, and remind the user the statements are drafts for author review — sign-off is theirs.
- Journal policy unverifiable (site unreachable, no policy found): emit the strict-default statements, clearly marked "default wording — verify against the journal's current author guidelines before submission."
- Inventory contradicts
--no-ai: stop and surface the contradiction; never produce a false "no AI" statement.
Flags
--no-ai — Skip the AI-use statement (user asserts none was used). The skill still warns if repo evidence visibly contradicts the assertion.
--statements-only — Print the statements to chat; write no file.
Cross-references
What this skill does NOT do
- Screen outputs for statistical disclosure risk — that is
/disclosure-check.
- Build the replication deposit — that is
/replication-package; this skill only writes the statement that points at it.
- Decide your ethics. It drafts honest statements from what you report and what the repo shows; whether a use needed disclosing under a vague policy is the author's call — the skill defaults to disclosure when in doubt.
- Submit anything. Statements go in the user's submission package by the user's hand.