Gill is considered one of the leading
Neo-Gramscian International Relations scholars, although his work adopts his own distinctive
historical materialist approach as a means of explaining
global power and the changing world order. His work draws on
Gramscian concepts such as American
hegemony (for the Gramscian definition, see
Hegemony),
cultural hegemony and historic blocs,
organic intellectuals and
state-civil society.
American Hegemony and the Trilateral Commission Gill's early work,
American Hegemony and the Trilateral Commission (1991) introduced many of these concepts which were used to theorise and identify the global ruling class formations drawn from politics, the corporate world and
civil society, and in particular the ideas of their leading thinkers ("organic intellectuals"). Gill showed how organisations such as the
Trilateral Commission sought to develop a consensus among ruling class elements on how to extend the power of capital, to govern world
capitalism, to defeat
communism and to oppose and undermine state formations that refused integration into the capitalist world market. The book has been praised for its combination of theoretical and methodological innovation and described as a "classic study" of the changing structures of global power since 1945. The book challenged the conventional wisdom of the 1980s, associated with
Yale historian
Paul Kennedy's
The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (1988), which argued that US hegemony was in decline in the 1980s and would likely decline further in the 1990s. Gill argued that US hegemony was reasserted during the 1980s, paving the way for
neoliberal capitalism to expand globally in the 1990s under US leadership. Gill argued that a key reason for this was a complex ("historical bloc") of liberal institutions, ideas and elites which was part of a highly developed US-led alliance structure that helped to politically cement the main capitalist states' strategies towards adversaries as well as promoting the
globalisation of capitalism. A review by
Gaddis Smith in
Foreign Affairs, the journal of the Trilateral Commission's sister organisation the
Council on Foreign Relations, noted that "the discussion is mercifully free of the polemical, conspiratorial assumptions behind many studies of this subject."
Gramsci, Historical Materialism and International Relations Gill's 1993 edited work,
Gramsci, Historical Materialism and International Relations, which gathers together essays on Gramsci by authors including Gill, Cox,
Kees van der Pijl and
Giovanni Arrighi, is considered one of the key texts on Gramscian and Neo-Gramscian theory and has been credited with broadening the audience for Gramsci's work within the field of International Relations.
Power and Resistance in the New World Order and more recent work In his more recent work, Gill has introduced new concepts such as
disciplinary neoliberalism,
new constitutionalism and
market civilization and has drawn significantly on
Michel Foucault’s theories of
panopticism and capillary power. Gill's concept of market civilization helps to explain the formation of social subjects in the era of neo-liberalism, based on a reading of how market values, market forces and disciplines, privatisation, and the commodification of life forms are becoming increasingly pervasive, working into the very micro-practices of everyday life. Gill’s collaboration with the noted
feminist scholar
Isabella Bakker in their edited work
Power, Production and Social Reproduction: Human In/security in the Global Political Economy is an attempt to develop a radical re-conceptualisation of political economy. The authors state their aim "is to bring together theories and concepts from Feminist and Radical Political Economy and Critical International Studies, and to harness them to a more encompassing methodological and theoretical perspective with which to study some of the new conditions of existence in the global political economy. It seeks to provide a new approach based on an effort to synthesise the moments of power, production and social reproduction in patterns of intensified globalization." In a review for the journal
Progress in Human Geography,
critical geographer Helen Jarvis noted how the book identifies and explains "complex relationships simultaneously at work in global flows (of people and finance) and local practices (of production and social reproduction)," adding that "it moves beyond grand narratives of hegemonic neoliberalism, unraveling hidden circuits of inequality in the social reproduction of daily life." ==Major works==