Corporations Monitoring...

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News ...welcome to a whole new site for Worldchambers network! WCN adopts a totally new design: new colours, new navigation, new site map to improve access of exporting and importing companies to the tools and information that chambers of commerce provide to facilitate international trade Why do you need ChamberTrust?

WCN World Chambers Network

http://www.worldchambers.com/
CrunchBase is the free database of technology companies, people, and investors that anyone can edit. Here, you can learn and edit everything about companies like Facebook , YouTube , Twitter , MySpace and Tagged , products like Droid and Google Wave , and people like Mark Zuckerberg and Steve Jobs . http://www.crunchbase.com/

CrunchBase, The Free Tech Company Database

Internet Business Search by BizShark

http://www.bizshark.com/ Comprehensive Business Information Find the latest news, finance, web traffic, market competition, social footprint, and other business information from over 50 trusted sources.

WebCHeck - Select and Access Company Information

Session has timed out. Please restart your browser and log back in. If you were filing an annual return or incorporation you will be given the option to resume your transaction. http://wck2.companieshouse.gov.uk/f996fb02131002d5d117059dc9359824/wcframe?name=accessCompanyInfo
Ongoing problems with corporate crime and misbehavior make it essential for progressive activists to know how to gather information on the way business operates. These days, all of us also need to be watchdogs against the excesses of corporate power. This Guide is designed to help researchers and activists gather essential information on any type of U.S.-based company, whether small or large, privately held or publicly traded. Given space limitations, the Guide does not contain sources that relate to specific industries or geographic areas. Also, aside from a few brief references to Canadian sources, there is no detailed discussion of information sources outside the United States.

How to Do Corporate Research | Corporate Research Project

http://corp-research.org/howto
http://www.multinationalmonitor.org/links/index.php Agribusiness | Antitrust | Auto Industry | Banking | Blowing the Whistle | Children and Corporations | Corporate - Funded, - Influenced or - Sympathetic Think Tanks | Corporate Campaigns and Company-specific Watch Dogs | Corporate Crime | Corporate Directories | Corporate Front Groups and Corporate-Backed Groups | Corporate Globalization | Corporate Power - General | Corporate Prison Industry | Corporate Trade Associations | Corporate Watch Dogs - Global | Corporate Welfare | Defense/Military | Drugs/Pharmaceuticals | Government Information About Corporations | Patents | Public Relations | Public Relations - Industry Sites | Researching Corporations | Universities and Corporations | Country and Regional Links

Multinational Monitor Links Page

http://www.transnationale.org/ The world's major commodities producers : gold , silver , copper , aluminum , nickel , zinc , uranium , oil , diamond , iron , platinum , gas , lead ... Human 18 Labor 34 Jobs /1998 Sales 379 Bn $.€ /year Profit 370 Bn $.€ /1998 Wage 56076 *min. Offshore 44 Fraud 24 Pollution 13 Influence 33 Infocom 21

Welcome to Transnationale.org: analysis of the world's largest companies.

Company Snapshot: Chevron, once part of the Standard Oil empire, has grown over the past quarter century into the world’s fourth largest petroleum company, thanks to a series of ambitious acquisitions: Gulf Oil in 1984, Texaco in 2001 and Unocal in 2005. The purchase of Texaco brought with it a massive environmental lawsuit that has dragged on for more than a decade. This is only one of a host of controversies surrounding Chevron’s environmental and human rights record around the world.

Latest corporate research | Crocodyl

http://www.crocodyl.org/
Citigroup is among the world’s largest financial institutions. As of July, it is also one-third owned by the U.S. government. Without the various subsidies and guarantees — totaling hundreds of billions of dollars — made available to Citigroup, it is very likely the bank would be insolvent. Many believe that — even with the government supports — with an honest accounting, it would be insolvent today. In the case of the failure of Citigroup, it would be taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) which has a long record of “resolving” failed banks — albeit not banks of the size and reach of Citi. The existing government stake in Citi, and the lingering prospect that the government might have to up its control share still further, raise the questions: Should the government exercise its ownership powers?

Multinational Monitor

http://multinationalmonitor.org/