Det fjerde politiske projekt (på engelsk: ’fourth political theory’) er en ideologi hvis formål er at bryde med modernismens projekt fuldstændigt, hvis primære manifestationer ses som liberalisme, kommunisme og fascime. Liberalisme er det første politiske projekt, efterfulgt af kommunisme og fascisme. Det fjerde politiske projekt skal derfor forstås som et alternativ til de moderne ideologier, hvis centrale forskel er dets antimoderne standpunkt. Det fjerde politiske projekts antimoderne tilgang er primært baseret på Martin Heideggers kritik af det moderne subjekt (forstået som individ, klasse, race/nation etc.) til fordel for subjektet Dasein. Ved Dasein forstås den autentiske Væren som eksisterer før konceptualiseringen af mennesket som enten individ, klasse eller race etc. Heidegger mente at filosofien har døjet med en misforståelse af Væren siden Platon, og at der derfor er behov for en ny begyndelse som tager Væren seriøst.
Although the concept of hegemony in Critical Theory is based on Antonio Gramsci’s theory, it is necessary to distinguish this concept’s position on Gramscianism and neo-Gramscianism from how it is understood in the realist and neo-realist schools of IR.
The classical realists use the term “hegemony” in a relative sense and understand it as the “actual and substantial superiority of the potential power of any state over the potential of another one, often neighboring countries.” Hegemony might be understood as a regional phenomenon, as the determination of whether one or another political entity is considered a “hegemon” depends on scale. Thucydides introduced the term itself when he spoke of Athens and Sparta as the hegemons of the Peloponnesian War, and classical realism employs this term in the same way to this day. Such an understanding of hegemony can be described as “strategic” or “relative.”
In neo-realism, “hegemony” is understood in a global (structural) context. The main difference from classical realism lies in that “hegemony” cannot be regarded as a regional phenomenon. It is always a global one. The neorealism of K. Waltz, for example, insists that the balance of two hegemons (in a bipolar world) is the optimal structure of power balance on a world scale[ii]. R. Gilpin believes that hegemony can be combined only with unipolarity, i.e., it is possible for only a single hegemon to exist, this function today being played by the USA.
In both cases, the realists comprehend hegemony as a means of potential correlation between the potentials of different state powers.
Gramsci's understanding of hegemony is completely different and finds itself in a completely opposite theoretical field. To avoid the misuse of this term in IR, and especially in the TMW, it is necessary to pay attention to Gramsci’s political theory, the context of which is regarded as a major priority in Critical Theory and TMW. Moreover, such an analysis will allows us to more clearly see the conceptual gap between Critical Theory and TMW.