The beginning of the neo-Gramscian perspective can be traced to
York University professor emeritus
Robert W. Cox's article "Social Forces, States and World Orders: Beyond International Relations Theory" in
Millennium 10 (1981) 2 and "Gramsci, Hegemony and International Relations: An Essay in Method", published in
Millennium 12 (1983) 2. In his 1981 article, Cox demands a critical study of IR as opposed to the usual "problem-solving" theories, which do not interrogate the origin, nature and development of historical structures, but accept for example that states and the (supposedly) "anarchic" relationships between them as
Kantian
Dinge an sich. However, Cox disavows the label neo-Gramscian despite the fact that in a follow-up article he showed how Gramsci's thought can be used to analyze power structures within the GPE. Particularly Gramsci's concept of
cultural hegemony, vastly different from the
realists' conception of hegemony, appears fruitful. Gramsci's state theory, his conception of "historic blocs"—dominant configurations of material capabilities, ideologies and institutions as determining frames for individual and
collective action—and of élites acting as "organic intellectuals" forging historic blocs, is also deemed useful. The neo-Gramscian approach has also been developed along somewhat different lines by Cox's colleague,
Stephen Gill, distinguished research professor of
political science at York University. Gill contributed to showing how the elite
Trilateral Commission acted as an "organic intellectual", forging the (currently hegemonic) ideology of
neoliberalism and the so-called
Washington Consensus and later in relation to the globalization of power and resistance in his book
Power and Resistance in the New World Order (Palgrave, 2003). Gill also partnered with fellow Canadian academic A. Claire Cutler to release a neo-Gramscian inspired volume entitled
New Constitutionalism and World Order (Cambridge, 2014). The book brings together a selection of critical theorists and neo-Gramscians to analyze the disciplinary power of legal and constitutional innovations in the global political economy. Co-editor A. Claire Cutler has been a pioneer scholar detailing a neo-Gramscian theory of
international law. Outside of North America, the so-called Amsterdam School around
Kees van der Pijl and
Henk Overbeek (at
VU University Amsterdam) and individual researchers in Germany, notably in
Düsseldorf,
Kassel and
Marburg as well as at the Centre for Global Political Economy at the
University of Sussex in the United Kingdom and other parts of the world, have adopted the neo-Gramscian critical method.
Christoph Scherrer at the
University of Kassel is one of the leading neo-Gramscian theorists in Germany who introduced the concept of "double hegemony". He represents the critical global political economy approach in Germany. == Basics of the neo-Gramscian perspective ==