Pan is a professor at and director of the Center of Chinese and World Affairs on the School of International Relations of Peking University. He made his name by denouncing the worship of democracy. A conservative close to the New Left and proponent of the China model.
Journal Articles
- Pan, Wei. “Reflections on the ‘China Model’ Discussion.” International Critical Thought 1.1 (2011): 11.
- Pan, Wei. “Toward a consultative rule of law regime in China.” Journal of Contemporary China 34 (Feb 2003): 3-43.
- Pan, Wei. “Core Social Values in Contemporary Societies.” Diogenes 56.221 (2009): 53.
- Pan, Wei. “’Large in size and a high degree of government administration’ should not be the direction of higher educational reform (part I).” Chinese Education and Society. 1 (Jan-Feb 2000): 68-76.
- Pan, Wei. “’Large in size and a high degree of government administration’ should not be the direction of higher educational reform (part II).” Chinese Education and Society. 1 (Jan-Feb 2000): 77-83.
- Pan, Wei. “Why are Chinese farmers so poor?” Social Sciences in China 3 (Fall 2005): 148-156.
Collections and Book Chapters
- Pan, Wei. “Reflections on the ‘Consultative rule of law regime’: a response to my critics.” Debating political reform in China: rule of law vs. democratization. Zhao, Suisheng. Armonk, N.Y.; London: M.E. Sharpe, 2006. 247-254.
- Pan, Wei. “Toward a consultative rule of law regime in China.” Debating political reform in China: rule of law vs. democratization. Zhao, Suisheng. Armonk, N.Y.; London: M.E. Sharpe, 2006. 3-40.
Translations on Web Sources
- Pan, Wei. “Through Chinese eyes: Pan Wei (part I).” Interview with the Interpreter. Lowy Institute. 27 Jul 2011. Web.
- Pan, Wei. “Through Chinese eyes: Pan Wei (part II).” Interview with the Interpreter. Lowy Institute. 3 Aug 2011. Web.