David A. Steiger is an attorney, author and lecturer, who has taught adult learners on the global economy and various legal topics for fifteen years.

Steiger was born in Gary, Indiana.  His father, Norman, whose formal education ended in the 8th grade to allow him to work on the family farm, rose from the position of deckhand to ship Captain, and ultimately Ocean Pilot.  His mother Mary Ann was a housewife and former ballroom dance instructor. (“The most expensive dance lessons I ever had,” remarked Norman, on how he met his future wife).  Norman passed away after a two-year bout with bone and prostate cancer in 1983, but not before giving his teenaged son a coffee mug embossed with the word “Lawyer” on it—a statement of faith that still stands as a most treasured possession to this day.

After graduating from high school, Steiger Attended Indiana University at Bloomington, where he received a Bachelor’s in Political Science in 1987 and a Juris Doctor in 1990.  After passing the Illinois Bar, he began his professional career as a litigation associate with a Chicago-based law firm. 

By early 1999, Steiger left private practice to manage complex and catastrophic products liability litigation for the American subsidiary of a global insurance conglomerate. Freed from the tyranny of filling out daily timesheets, he soon joined the Adjunct Faculty of DePaul University’s School for New Learning, first teaching a course entitled “Global Capitalism.” The success of this course led to an opportunity to serve as a moderator for a series of panel discussions on issues in globalization, featuring current and retired Ambassadors to the United Nations. Steiger followed this up by designing and teaching courses to cohorts of native students at the International Bank of Asia in Hong Kong and St. Gabriel’s College in Bangkok, Thailand.

In 2003, Steiger published his first Op-ed piece, in the Sunday, September 30, 2003 edition of the Chicago Tribune. In that piece, Steiger showed an early flash of prescience (which has been a common theme of his work) postulating that the economic benefits of legal outsourcing would cause it to be more quickly and readily accepted than was generally thought at that time.

Recognizing that the increasing number of small and medium sized businesses being pulled into the global economy had few resources to guide them, Steiger set out in 2005 to create one for them. Over the next three years, he logged tens of thousands of miles to visit outsourcing centers in India, met with in-house legal staff in Singapore and developed guanxi with Chinese-based business insiders, while pulling together an impressive roster of experts in order to offer a truly global perspective on doing business overseas. In 2008, ABA Publishing released “The Globalized Lawyer: Secrets to Managing Outsourcing, Joint Ventures and other Cross-Border Transactions,” in which Steiger explained in clear, understandable terms critical methods and cautions related to the negotiation and implementation of cross-border transactions.

Now, with the publication of his second book, "Transactions Without Borders: A Client and Lawyer's Guide to Overseas Operations," Steiger expands his easily accessible explanation of international transactional topics into such critically important areas as anti-corruption compliance, intellectual property and data protection and labor and immigration issues. Targeting an audience of both transactional attorneys and the client executives who oversee their work product, this book will prove a useful guide to anyone involved in the planning, negotiation and implementation of an international business operation. In particular, the book is written with an eye towards educating and empowering transactional clients in a world in which the balance of power in their relationship with attorneys is already decidedly shifting in their favor.