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Orville Schell
was born in New York City and graduated from Harvard University Magna
Cum Laude in Far Eastern History studying under Professors Benjamin
Schwartz and John King Fairbank.
Professor Schell then studied Chinese language at Stanford University,
was an exchange student at National Taiwan University and finally
received his MA and Ph.d (abd) from the University of California,
Berkeley.
Prof. Schell has worked for the Ford Foundation in Indonesia and
covered the war in Indochina for magazines such as the Atlantic Monthly
and the New Republic. Since then, he has written widely for many other
magazine and newspapers,including The New Yorker, Time Magazine,
Harpers, The Nation, The New York Review of Books, Wired, Foreign
Affairs, Newsweek, the China Quarterly, Harpers and the New York Times,
Washington Post and Los Angeles Times. He has written fourteen books,
nine on China, and is at work on an interpretation of the last 100
years of Chinese history.
Prof. Schell was a Fellow at Columbia University's Graduate School
of Journalism and the recipient of many prizes and fellowships,
including a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Overseas Press Club Award, and
the Harvard-Stanford Shorenstein Prize in Asian Journalism.
Prof. Schell, the former Dean of the Graduate School of Journalism
at the University of California, Berkeley for eleven years, was
recently appointed by the Asia Society as the Arthur Ross Director to
set up its new Center on US China Relations in New York City. The
Center is now working on a number of new projects to strengthen Sino-US
relations, including the Initiative on US-China Cooperation on Energy
and Climate, a joint partnership with the The Pew Center on Global
Climate Change, as well as The Brookings Institution, The National
Committee on US-China Relations, Environmental Defense and the Council
on Foreign Relations. The Initiative's Co-chairs have been John
Thornton and Steve Chu, now Secretary of Energy.
Professor Schell is a Fellow at the Weatherhead East Asian
Insititute at Columbia University, a Senior Fellow at the Annenberg
School of Communications at USC and a member of the Council on Foreign
Relations.
He is married to Liu Baifang and has three children. |
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