Professor, Associate Dean Schar School Program Faculties
Contact Information
703-993-2955
Mason Square, Van Metre Hall, Room 515
3351 Fairfax Drive
Arlington, VA 22201
MSN: 3B1
4400 University Drive
Fairfax, VA 22030
MSN: 3F4
Personal Websites
Biography
Ming Wan is a professor and associate dean at George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government.
He is the author of The Political Economy of East Asia: Wealth and Power, 2nd ed. (Northampton, MA.: Edward Elgar, 2020); The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: The Construction of Power and the Struggle for the East Asian International Order (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016); Understanding Japan-China Relations: Theories and Issues (World Scientific, 2016); The China Model and Global Political Economy: Comparison, Impact, and Interaction (Routledge, 2014); The Political Economy of East Asia: Striving for Wealth and Power (CQ Press, October 2008); Sino-Japanese Relations: Interaction, Logic, and Transformation (Woodrow Wilson Center Press and Stanford University Press, 2006); Human Rights in Chinese Foreign Relations: Defining and Defending National Interests (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001), and Japan Between Asia and the West: Economic Power and Strategic Balance (M.E. Sharpe, 2001).
Wan has also published in journals such as Asian Survey, Chinese Journal of International Politics, Human Rights Quarterly, Orbis, Pacific Affairs, Pacific Review, and International Studies Quarterly, and in edited volumes. His current research interests include international relations theory, Sino-Japanese relations, and the political economy of East Asia security.
He earned his PhD from the Department of Government at Harvard University. Wan has held postdoctoral fellowships at Harvard from the Program on U.S.-Japan Relations, the John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies, and the Pacific Basin Research Center, and has been a visiting research scholar at the University of Tsukuba and a George Washington University-Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Luce Fellow in Asian Policy Studies. He was a visiting professor at Keio University of Japan in 2010-12.
Areas of Research:
- East Asia
- Foreign Policy
- International Development
- Political Economy of East Asia
- International Relations
- International Relations Theory
- Political Economy
- Political Economy of Security
- Sino-Japanese Relations
- U.S.-China Strategic Rivalry