Gregory J. Moore

Gregory J. Moore is an American political scientist specializing in international relations, international security and Chinese politics and foreign policy. He is a conservative Christian and in 2022 ran for US Senate as a Republican in Colorado.[2][3] In 2020 he became a professor of global studies and politics at Colorado Christian University in Lakewood.[1] Before then he taught political science at universities in China such as Zhejiang University and University of Nottingham Ningbo for roughly a decade.[4][5]

Professor

Gregory John Moore
Born
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Other names莫凯歌 (Mo Kaige)
President of the Association of Chinese Political Studies
In office
2020–2022
Head of the School of International Studies, University of Nottingham Ningbo China
In office
2015–2020
PresidentYang Fujia
Succeeded byGrant Dawson (acting)
David E. Kiwuwa
Personal details
Political partyColorado Republican Party
Children3 sons[1]

Philosophy career
EducationConcordia College (BA,1987)
University of Virginia (MA,1991)
University of Denver (PhD,2004)
Institutions
ThesisHuman Nature, Collective Society and International Relations in the Thought of Reinhold Niebuhr (1991)
Tiananmen, Taiwan and Belgrade: The Construction of Conflict in Sino-American Relations, 1989, 1995–1996, and 1999 (2004)
Doctoral advisorSuisheng Zhao
Main interests

Biography

Moore was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[6] He is an evangelical Christian.[2]

Education

In 1987, he earned a bachelor's degree in art and a minor in English from Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota. During his undergraduate studies, Moore spent a semester as an exchange student at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, which encouraged his interest in international affairs.[1]

In 1991, he earned a master's degree in government and foreign affairs from the University of Virginia with a thesis on the thought of Reinhold Niebuhr.

After spending two years in China teaching international trade and then another year studying Chinese full time, Moore pursued a PhD in international studies at the University of Denver. During his doctoral studies, Moore focused on China and East Asia and became the assistant director of the university's Center for China-U.S. Cooperation. In 2004, he earned his doctorate with a thesis on China-U.S. relations under the supervision of Chinese political scientist Suisheng Zhao and theorist Jack Donnelly. He studied Chinese for a year and a half in China during his doctoral studies before graduating with his PhD.[1]

Academic career

Moore's research interests include international relations theory, constructivism in particular, international security, the North Korean nuclear issue, Sino-American Relations, East Asian studies, and foreign policy analysis of China and the United States.[7] He is the author/editor of four books on international relations and has extensively written academic journal articles, book chapters and policy essays.

Politician

In 2022, Moore was one of the eight candidates in the U.S. Senate race challenging the Democrat incumbent, Michael Bennet.[4][8][9] However, he did not advance through the preliminary primary process on April 9, 2022, so did not make it on to the primary ballot in June, 2022.[10]

Affiliations

Moore has been affiliated with the following organizations:

Personal life

Moore is a fluent Chinese speaker,[11] and is married to Chenchen, from Zhejiang, China, and has three sons.[1] In 2011, he got a Chinese driver's license.[12]

In China, Moore's Chinese name is 莫凯歌(Mo Kaige).[13]

Political views

According to Moore, as a political scientist, he try to get a balanced view of politics by reading liberal newspapers such as The New York Times and conservative newspapers The Washington Times. He also listens to NPR, and partakes of Christian radio and Fox News, which are conservative.[2]

2020 United States elections

Moore argues that many American conservatives get their news from unreliable news sources via social media, and that these have increasingly shaped their views and both planted and watered conspiracy theories. Therefor, Moore believes that conservatives must concede that Joe Biden won the election, leave behind the "Stop The Steal" activism, and be vigilant against rightist extremism.[2]

Works

Books

  • An International Relations Research Methods Toolkit (Routledge, forthcoming)
  • Niebuhrian International Relations: The Ethics of Foreign Policymaking (Oxford University Press, 2020).[14]
  • North Korean Nuclear Operationality: Regional Security and Non-Proliferation (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014)(editor, foreword by Graham Allison).
  • Human Rights and US Policy Toward China from a Christian Perspective (St. Davids, Pennsylvania: Crossroads Monograph Series on Faith and Public Policy, 1999).

Selected articles

  • Huawei, Cyber-Sovereignty and Liberal Norms: China's Challenge to the West/Democracies. Journal of Chinese Political Science. (2022): 1–17.
  • Audience Costs and China's South China Sea Policy. Journal of Asian Security and International Affairs, 7.3(2020): 325–348 (with Christopher Primiano).
  • Bismarck or Wilhelm? China's Peaceful Rise vs. Its South China Sea Policy. Asian Perspective, 42.2(2018): 265–283.
  • Avoiding a Thucydides Trap in Sino-American relations (... and 7 reasons why that might be difficult). Asian Security, 13.2(2017): 98–115.
  • The Power of "Sacred Commitments": Chinese Interests in Taiwan. Foreign Policy Analysis, 12.2(2016): 214–235.
  • The Difference a Day Makes: Understanding the End of the Sino-American “Tacit Alliance”. International Studies Review, 16.4(2014): 540–574.
  • "In Your Face": Domestic Politics, Nationalism, and "Face" in the Sino-Japanese Islands Dispute. Asian Perspective, 38.2(2014): 219–240.
  • Constructing Cooperation in Northeast Asia: Historical Northeast Asian Dyadic Cultures and the Potential for Greater Regional Cooperation. Journal of Contemporary China, 22.83(2013): 887–904.
  • An International Relations Perspective on the Science, Politics, and Potential of an Extraterrestrial Sino-US Arms Race. Asian Perspective, 35.4.(2011): 643–658.
  • History, Nationalism and Face in Sino-Japanese Relations. Journal of Chinese Political Science, 3.15(2010): 283–306.
  • Not Very Material but Hardly Immaterial: China's Bombed Embassy and Sino-American Relations. Foreign Policy Analysis, 6.1(2010): 23–41.
  • How North Korea Threatens China’s Interests: Understanding Chinese ‘Duplicity’ on the North Korean Nuclear Issue. International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, 8.1(2008): 1–29.
  • America's Failed North Korea Nuclear Policy: A New Approach. Asian Perspective, 34.2(2008): 9–27.
  • From the Ground Up: Recent Contributions of the China/area studies and Sino–American Relations Literature to IR Theory. Journal of Contemporary China, 13.39(2004): 391–408.

Selected essays

Selected book chapters

  • China, Russia and the United States: Balance of Power or National Narcissism?. In Brandon Yoder (ed.) The United States and Contemporary China-Russia Relations. Palgrave Macmillan, 2022: 55–77
  • The Logic of Power Politics: The Thucydides Trap and the China-US Trade War. In Shiping Hua (ed.) The Political Logic of the US–China Trade War. Lexington Books. 2022.
  • Less Beautiful, Still Somewhat Imperialist: Beijing Eyes Sino-US Relations. In Shaun Breslin (ed.) Handbook of China's International Relations. Routledge. 2010: 129–137.
  • China's Strategic Posture in the Asia-Pacific Region under the Leadership of Hu Jintao. In Simon Shen (ed.) Multidimensional Diplomacy of Contemporary China. Lexington Books. 2010.
  • The Roles of Misperceptions and Perceptual Gaps in the Taiwan Strait Crisis of 1995–1996. In Shiping Hua and Sujian Guo (eds.) China in the Twenty-First Century. Palgrave Macmillan. 2007: 171–194

Supervised works

  • Krasnopolsky, Peter (2019). Central Asian regionalism and the roles of Russia and China: Money, Transport, Energy, Ideas. University of Nottingham Ningbo.[15]
    • China, Russia and Central Asian Infrastructure: Fragmenting or Reformatting the Region? (Palgrave Macmillan, 2022).
  • Gao, Bo [高波] (2017). Crossing the Ya-Lu River: Chinese economic activities in North Korea Post-2002. University of Nottingham Ningbo.[16]
    • China's Economic Engagement in North Korea (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019).
  • Wang, Qixing [王齐兴] (2016). Analysis of the Role of Big Data in Constructing National Information Security: Case Studies of China and the United States.(Chinese: 大数据构建国家信息安全作用分析 ——以中美为例). Zhejiang University.[17]
  • Weng, Zhimian [翁知勉] (2014). The Balance of Tribute in Perspective of Power: Exploring the Construction and Operation of the Tributary System (Chinese: 权势视角下的朝贡均衡——探析朝贡体系的建构与运行). Zhejiang University.[18]
  • Yao, Jinfang [姚金芳] (2014). Current Situation and Future of Fishermen's Safety in China's Maritime Disputes: A "Human Security" Perspective. (Chinese: 中国海洋争端中的渔民安全现状与未来:“人的安全”视角). Zhejiang University.[19]
  • Fazza, Gloria (2012). China's Engagement in Myanmar: Cross-border Interventions against Drug Trafficking. Zhejiang University.

References

  1. "Dr. Gregory J. Moore". Colorado Christian University. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  2. "From a Conservative to Conservatives on President Trump and the Election". Patheos. February 17, 2021. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  3. Miklin, Freda (April 7, 2022). "Colorado Republican candidates for the U.S. Senate". The Villager. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  4. Luning, Ernest. "TRAIL MIX | After a decade in China, Bennet challenger Gregory Moore plans to speak his mind". Colorado Politics. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  5. "Colorado Christian University political scientists declares run for U.S. Senate". FOX21 News Colorado. January 18, 2022. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  6. "Gregory Moore". Ballotpedia. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  7. "The North Korea Issue and Its Impact on Sino-US Relations in the Xi-Trump Era". East Asian International Relations (EAIR) Caucus. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  8. Kenney, Andrew. "At forum, Republican Senate candidates diverge on 2020 election claims, Ukraine". Colorado Public Radio. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  9. "Candidate Interview: Greg Moore for U.S. Senate". The Kim Monson Show. February 8, 2022. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  10. "Gregory Moore". Ballotpedia. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  11. "Interview-with-Gregory Moore". www.nottingham.edu.cn. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  12. "和谐的关键是不对陌生人冷漠". 浙江新闻. Retrieved November 7, 2022. I got a Chinese driver's license last year and started to really immerse myself in Chinese society (我去年办了中国的驾照,开始真正沉浸在中国的社会里面)
  13. "第一届全球青年学者峰会暨"跨学科视角下的中国与世界"". 同济大学政治与国际关系学院 (Tongji University School of Political Sciences & International Relations). 宁波诺丁汉大学国际关系系主任莫凯歌(Gregory Moore)副教授
  14. Tooley, Mark. "Gregory J. Moore on Niebuhrian International Relations". Providence: A Journal of Christianity & American Foreign Policy. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  15. Krasnopolsky, Peter (January 25, 2019). "Central Asian regionalism and the roles of Russia and China: money, transport, energy, ideas". eprints.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  16. GAO, Bo (July 16, 2017). "Crossing the Ya-Lu River: Chinese economic activities in North Korea Post-2002". eprints.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  17. "大数据构建国家信息安全作用分析". CNKI. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  18. "权势视角下的朝贡均衡". CNKI. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  19. "中国海洋争端中的渔民安全现状与未来:"人的安全"视角". CNKI. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
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