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| genre = [[Nonfiction]]
| genre = [[Nonfiction]]
| publisher = [[Putnam Publishing Group|Putnam]]
| publisher = [[Putnam Publishing Group|Putnam]]
| pub_date = 1995
| pub_date = 2010 (2nd ed), 1995 (1st ed)
| media_type = Hardback & Paperback
| media_type = Hardback & Paperback
| pages = 354
| pages = 354
| isbn = 978-0-399-14011-2
| isbn = 2nd edition 9781451571547 1451571542 ; 1st edition 978-0-399-14011-2
| oclc =
| oclc =
| preceded_by = Dragon Lady: The Life and Legend of the Last Empress of China
| preceded_by = Dragon Lady: The Life and Legend of the Last Empress of China
| followed_by = The Yamato Dynasty: The Secret History of Japan's Imperial Family
| followed_by = The Yamato Dynasty: The Secret History of Japan's Imperial Family
}}
}}
'''''Lords of the Rim''''' is a 1995 book by American historian [[Sterling Seagrave]]. It is a history of Chinese [[expatriate]] economics written for the lay person and has received mainly positive reviews.<ref>http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-399-14011-2</ref> Presenting an in-depth overview of the outstanding success of expatriate Chinese business people around the [[Pacific Rim]], the author begins with a potted history of China’s finance and business practises over the last three thousand years and the political reasons for the first tide of entrepreneurs to chance their luck overseas.
'''''Lords of the Rim''''' is book by American historian [[Sterling Seagrave]] first published in 1995 and substantially updated in a second edition of 2010. It is a history of Chinese [[expatriate]] economics written for the lay person and has received mainly positive reviews.<ref>http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-399-14011-2</ref> Presenting an in-depth overview of the outstanding success of expatriate Chinese business people around the [[Pacific Rim]], the author begins with a potted history of China’s finance and business practises over the last three thousand years and the political reasons for the first tide of entrepreneurs to chance their luck overseas.


==Outline==
==Outline==

Revision as of 23:54, 9 June 2015

Lords of the Rim
AuthorSterling Seagrave
LanguageEnglish
SubjectHistory, Economics, Business
GenreNonfiction
PublisherPutnam
Publication date
2010 (2nd ed), 1995 (1st ed)
Publication placeUnited States
Media typeHardback & Paperback
Pages354
ISBN2nd edition 9781451571547 1451571542 ; 1st edition 978-0-399-14011-2 Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character
Preceded byDragon Lady: The Life and Legend of the Last Empress of China 
Followed byThe Yamato Dynasty: The Secret History of Japan's Imperial Family 

Lords of the Rim is book by American historian Sterling Seagrave first published in 1995 and substantially updated in a second edition of 2010. It is a history of Chinese expatriate economics written for the lay person and has received mainly positive reviews.[1] Presenting an in-depth overview of the outstanding success of expatriate Chinese business people around the Pacific Rim, the author begins with a potted history of China’s finance and business practises over the last three thousand years and the political reasons for the first tide of entrepreneurs to chance their luck overseas.

Outline

Slowly but surely, over the last two to three thousand years, Chinese expatriates have gained a firm trade and business foothold in almost every country around the Pacific Rim area, from Vietnam and Indochina to the West Coast of the United States and Canada.

Seagrave attempts to disclose the way these Chinese merchants do business, with each other and with others. He claims that many of these entrepreneurs, despite how many years or centuries they may have been settled in a particular country hold no real allegiance to any government or people except their ancestral clans and ‘home’ villages in China. The author also reveals some of the dubious and aggressive business practices these Lords of the Rim have adopted and mastered over the years. These tactics and their traditional work ethos go some way to explain their astonishing success in the past and up to the present day.[2][3]

References