International 
  Business Society Management is the product of an ongoing research effort on 
  the interaction between International Business strategies, regulation and societal 
  change. Several research projects are under way, of which only a small part 
  has already been published. These research projects are coordinated by Professor 
  Rob van Tulder and headed by the SCOPE Expert Centre, located at the department 
  of BusinessSociety Management at the Rotterdam School of Management (RSM). Since 
  its establishment in 1997, a main preoccupation of SCOPE has been to document 
  the internationalization strategies of the largest (core) firms in the world. 
  The SCOPE centre co-ordinates the research in areas of International Business-Society 
  Management. The SCOPE database covers the internationalization strategies of 
  two hundred of the world's largest enterprises and the Top 50 largest national 
  enterprises of the: United States of America, Japan, France, United Kingdom, 
  Germany, The Netherlands and Switzerland. The database is a pivotal project 
  in a broader interdisciplinary project on "internationalization and competitive 
  space". The research project and database are coordinated by the SCOPE. 
  The SCOPE-database is intended to function as a tool for the researchers at 
  the Erasmus University, plus a number of selected "linkage" projects 
  that take place in collaboration with partner universities and institutes. These 
  latter projects depart from a common selection of "core firms". Consequently, 
  the internationalization strategies of the selection of firms are linked to 
  other strategies of firms (e.g. R&D, Environmental strategies). The International 
  Business Competence centre SCOPE collaborates with UNCTAD in the research for 
  the annual World Investment Report, which receives always wide acclaim in the 
  international media for its coverage of timely topics concerning transnational 
  enterprises and topics of internationalization and development. An international 
  research visitation committee in 2002 explicitly acclaimed SCOPE for its scientific 
  performance, societal impact over the years and clear potential for the coming 
  years. www.b-sm.org/research 
  Issues of International business
The world’s most controversial issues are also settled on the interface
  between (big) international business and society: environmental regulation,
  tax regimes, trade and investment regimes, standardisation, the UN Millennium
  goals (tackling poverty, malnourishment and lack of education), terrorism,
  the adequate provision of public goods (water, safety, electricity), codes
  of conduct. Fundamental research in these areas is always linked to applied
  research for concrete organisations. Most SCOPE reports on these issues are
  available online. The SCOPE expert centre also collaborates with other Dutch
  Universities in a joint effort to create sufficient intellectual mass in the
  area of ‘sustainable business and development cooperation’ (www.ecsad.nl).
  Research projects have focussed on global commodity chains, NGO-business partnerships
  and transfer-pricing. 
  Detailed studies always focus on theory building and data collection. Recent
  studies have been published in the form of PhD theses on the following topics:
• 
  The Greening of Black Gold -on the relationship between internationalisation
  and environment strategies (2005, dr. Susanne van de Wateringen, University
  of Amsterdam)
• 
  Foreign Direct Investment and competition policy in China (2004, dr. Guoyong
  Liang)
• 
  International business and regionalism (2004, dr. Alan Muller, with honours)
• 
  Banking across borders (2004, dr. Alfred Slager, with honours)
• 
  Working across borders (2003, dr. Douglas Van den Berghe)
• 
  Global Sourcing strategies (2001, Dr. Michael Mol)
• 
  Competitiveness and multinationals from small countries (2000, Dr. Robert Goedegebuure)
  Most of these studies can be downloaded from the ERIM Series in Management
  website (www.erim.eur.nl)
  TNI databank. Since 1996, a joint databank by the SCOPE expert centre is sustained
    in collaboration with UNCTAD, the Geneva based United Nations organisation
    on Trade Aid and Development. This effort has resulted in the annual publication
    in the prestigious World Investment Reports of two widely quoted lists: (1)
    the world’s top 100 Transnational Corporations (TNCs) and (2) the Top50
    TNCs from developing countries. The source of these data is then referred
    to as “Unctad/Erasmus University databank”. Internationalisation
    is measured by the Transnationality Index (TNI), a weighted measure of the
    internationalisation of sales, employment and assets. The overall ranking
    is based on the total size of foreign assets. The world’s largest transnationals
    stem from the Anglo-Saxon and the smaller countries. The developing world’s
    largest TNC from developing countries originally were only in the oil industry,
    but presently indicate the coming of age of Asia as a breeding ground for
    (future) multinationals. All reports are available on-line (www.unctad.org).
    The leading multinationals in the world, generally represent a relatively
    stable group (as the illustrative table shows), but below the surface major
    turmoil can be registred. The largest TNCs from developing countries generally
    are more international than their developed countries’ counterparts.
    But the illustration also shows that the process of ‘globalization’ is
    not that clearcut and does not necessarily lead to ever increasing levels
  of internationalization of leading firms. 
TRANSNATIONALITY INDEX (TNI)
  The world’s largest TNC
1996:	General Electric (USA) (30.7)
  1997:	General Electric (USA) (33.1)
  1998:	General Electric (USA) (36.3)
  1999:	General Electric (USA) (36.7)
  2000:	Vodafone (UK) (81.4)
  2001:	Vodafone (UK) (83.2)
  2002: General Electric (USA) (40.6)
  2003: General Electic (USA) (43.2)	
The developing world’s largest TNC
1996:	Daewoo Corporation (Korea) (54.5)
  1997:	Petroleos de Venezuela (Ven.) (44.5)
  1998:	Petroleos de Venezuela (Ven) (23.7)
  1999:	Hutchison Whampoa (H.K/China) (38.0)
  2000:	Hutchison Whampoa (H.K./China) (50.3)
  2001:	Hutchison Whampoa (H.K./China) (44.1)
  2002:	Hutchison Whampoa (H.K./China) (71.1)
  2003: Hutchison Whampoa (H.K./China) (71.4)
    Source: UNCTAD, Erasmus University Database 
One of the products of the SCOPE research is the Erasmus (S)coreboard of Core Companies (also avaible for download):
Authors: Rob van Tulder, Douglas van den Berghe, Alan Muller
  Publisher: SCOPE, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam
  Year: 2001
The
  Erasmus (S)coreboard of Core Companies documents the restructuring and internationalization
  strategies of a representative sample of the world's largest companies. The
  present (S)coreboard assesses the 'true face of globalization', exposing in
  particular the reality behind several major debates of the 1990s, including
  the myth of globalization, the fallacy of lean production/increased outsourcing,
  and the alleged diminished significance of 'Old Economy' players. The study
  shows that for some companies internationalization is not a prerequisite for
  economic survival, whereas for others is seems imperative. National origins,
  long dismissed by many, still matter. In addition, the (S)coreboard illustrates
  the continued importance of core companies for national economies, countering
  claims of increasing competition, downsizing and the 'vogue' of newcomer companies
  in the innovation arena. Finally, the present study makes first attempt at
  revealing the mechanisms behind regionalism: the European Union in the 1990s
  for instance has become the locus of non-European Core Company expansion, while
  at the same time a platform for extra-regional expansion by European Core Companies.
  By focusing on 'core companies' the firm-specific trends covered in this (S)coreboard
  can be linked to macro-economic trends as well. This study illustrates the
  usefulness of such an approach in an age of growing uncertainty.
Click here to download the full document (pdf)