
China and the United States should work closely together to develop comprehensive bilateral solutions to twenty-first century governance challenges.

The world order is changing amid a host of global challenges and Sino-U.S. bilateral relations are evolving in response to China’s growing capabilities and assertiveness.

President Obama’s recent visit to Asia underscored the importance of the U.S.-China relationship and the challenge of managing it in the context of increasing interdependence, but also tension and mistrust.

As the bilateral relationship between the United States and China grows increasingly global in nature, the two nations' leaders have acknowledged the need to create a new, more constructive bilateral framework.

This day-long conference explored China's evolving foreign policy and global role with a view to identifying effective solutions to shared global challenges.
On the heels of Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Barack Obama’s historic meeting at the Sunnylands Estate in California, analysts seek to assess what was achieved, and the implications for U.S.-China relations moving forward.

BBC Radio’s Robin Lustig moderated a debate with Elizabeth Economy, Chas W. Freeman, Jr., J. Stapleton Roy, and Yan Xuetong on what the next American president should do about China.
The U.S. pivot to the Asia-Pacific has created both tension and opportunity in its relations with China.
As China’s global presence grows, the role that it will play in the international systems remains hotly contested both inside and outside of country.

Amid discussions of a U.S. decline, the role that China will play as a global leader becomes an ever more heated topic. However, debate remains about whether China is ready or willing to be a global leader.