The aim of this study is to contribute to the intellectual efforts in this direction by focusing on one of the core concepts of Neo-Gramscian studies: "hegemony", that has a central place in the Critical Theory of Robert Cox. Throughout the article, Coxian "hegemony" ...
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This study examines the struggle of European countries to establish their own hegemony as a historical bloc under a European Union (EU) within the framework of the theory of "hegemony" developed by Antonio Gramsci and adapted by Robert Cox for global politics, and the ...
Since Robert Cox's early interventions in the 1980s, the work of Gramsci has been openly applied to the arena of international politics, often superimposed on to the wider concepts of world order and transnational class formation. While this has produced a great deal of commendable scholarly ...
Bieler, A., Morton, A., `A Critical Theory Route to Hegemony, World Order and Historical Change: Neo-Gramscian Perspectives in International Relations', Capital & Class, Vol. 28, No. 1, 2004Bieler, A., & Morton, A. D. (2004). A critical theory route to hegemony, world order and ...
Bieler, Andreas and Adam David Morton (forthcoming) 'A Critical Theory Route to Hegemony, World Order and Historical Change: neo-Gramscian Perspectives in International Relations', Capital & Class.Bieler, A., & Morton, A. (2004). A critical theory route to hegemony, world order and ...
GramsciSince Robert Cox's early interventions in the 1980s, the work of Gramsci has been openly applied to the arena of international politics, often superimposed on to the wider concepts of 'world order' and 'transnational class' formation. While this has produced a great deal of commendable ...
Situated within a historical materialist problematic of social transformation that deploys many of the insights of the Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci, a crucial break emerged, in the 1980s, in the work of Robert Cox from mainstream International Relations (IR) approaches to hegemony. This article...
As regards theory, Owen Worth examines the concept of hegemony as developed in neo-Gramscian IPE. Hegemony, for realist international relations, was about the power of dominant states to shape the international order, while Gramsci's concept has been adapted ...