Peter Gries was born in Singapore and grew up in Hong Kong, Washington, DC, Tokyo, and Beijing. He later earned bachelor's and master's degrees in Asian Studies at Middlebury and Michigan, and a PhD in politics from UC Berkeley. After a two-year postdoc at Ohio State, he was assistant professor of political science at the University of Colorado, Boulder for five years. He then spent eleven years at the University of Oklahoma, where he founded and directed the Institute for US-China Issues and its two signature programs (the Newman Prize for Chinese Literature, and the US-China Diplomatic Dialogue.)[1]
Gries joined the University of Manchester as Professor of Chinese Politics in August 2017. After an autumn of fundraising and a £5M donation endowing a new China Institute, in December 2017 he became the Lee Kai Hung Chair and founding Director of the Manchester China Institute, which was formally launched in May 2018. Its two signature programs are the UK-China International Photography Competition, and the UK-China Diplomatic Dialogue.[2]
“A new measure of the ‘Democratic Peace’: What country feeling thermometer data can teach us about the drivers of American and Western European foreign policy,” Political Research Exchange, 2.1 (2020). Gries, et al.
“Taiwan’s perilous futures: Chinese Nationalism, the 2020 Presidential Elections, and U.S.-China Tensions Spell Trouble for Cross-strait Relations,” World Affairs 183.1 (Winter 2020). Peter Gries and Tao Wang.
“Are the US and China fated to fight? How narratives of ‘power transition’ shape great power war or peace,” Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 32.4 (2019). Gries & Jing.
“National Images as Integrated Schemas: Subliminal Primes of Image Attributes Shape Foreign Policy Preferences,” Political Psychology, 37.3 (2016). Castano, Bonacossa, & Gries.
“Hollywood in China: How American Popular Culture Shapes Chinese Views of the ‘Beautiful Imperialist,’ an Experimental Analysis,” The China Quarterly, 224 (2015). Gries, Sanders, Stroup, & Cai.
“Taiwanese Views of China & the World: Party Identification, Ethnicity, and Cross–Strait Relations,” Japanese Journal of Political Science, 14.1 (2013): 73–96. Gries & Su.
“Toward the Scientific Study of Polytheism: Beyond Forced-Choice Measures of Religious Belief,” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 51.4 (2012). Gries, Su & Schak.
“God, guns, and... China? How ideology impacts American attitudes and policy preferences toward China,” International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, 12.1 (2012). Gries, Crowson & Cai.
“When knowledge is a double edged sword: Contact, media exposure, and American attitudes towards China” Journal of Social Issues, 67.4 (2011). Gries, Crowson, & Cai.