Center on U.S.-China Relations

Forging an open and collaborative relationship between the U.S. and China is essential to global peace, security, balanced economic growth and environmental sustainability.
Orville Schell is the Arthur Ross Director of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at Asia Society in New York. He is a former professor and Dean at the University of California, Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism.
The future Ambassador to China made his remarks at the launch of an Asia Society-Woodrow Wilson Center report on Chinese foreign direct investment.
Much has been written about China's so-called Jasmine Revolution
This report looks in-depth at how in the coming decade Chinese capital, in excess of $1 trillion, will be seeking direct investment opportunities abroad. The Center delivers its recommendations on ways in which the U.S. can benefit.
The Chinese are currently developing economic and political theories directly from their authoritarian society, rather than trying to model them after the West, says Orville Schell in conversation with the Institute for New Economic Thinkin
In advance of his Metropolitan Opera debut, Peter Sellars speaks with Orville Schell about the past, present and future of US-China relations as well as the role of culture in this constantly evolving relationship.
挑战越大,就越显得需要他坚韧寻找解决方案的决心。 [Read the Chinese version of Orville Schell's remarks on the passing of the Ambassador and Special Adviser for Afghanistan and Pakistan.]
The harder the challenge, the more it seemed to provoke his fierce determination to find a solution.
China's ham-handed response to Liu Xiaobo's Nobel Peace Prize has undercut its attempt to project “soft power” around the world.
For a Westerner learning Chinese, the contrasts between what you say and what you do can seem baffling.