The real organizations working the faith, family & freedom space in each region — and how to read them before you knock on a door.
These groups run from big-tent and brand-safe to highly contested. With the Flynn association already a variable, which partner you lead with matters as much as the region. Start warm, escalate deliberately.
Nearly every group below is an advocacy, legal, or political voice. Almost none ship consumer software. You arrive with infrastructure they lack — that's a complement, not a competitor.
Five networks already connect this movement across borders. They are the fastest way to reach many partners at once — but they sit at very different points on the perception axis, so read the tags before the text.
An international network convening conservative and classical-liberal politicians, business leaders, academics, and clergy around a "renewal of the West" — with faith and family treated as foundational. Its conferences have drawn thousands of delegates from around seventy nations; co-founders include Baroness Philippa Stroud and Jordan Peterson.
The closest analog to what you're building, and the least single-issue of the networks. Its civilizational, big-tent framing maps almost exactly onto the four pillars. This is the natural anchor for Phase I.
The largest global pro-family convening network, running international congresses across most regions with recurring hubs including Budapest. Explicitly organized around the "natural family."
Enormous reach, but heavily contested — widely tracked and criticized by watchdog and press outlets, and some affiliates carry hostile designations. A reach multiplier to approach late and deliberately, not a doorway to lead with.
A transatlantic network linking elected legislators and activists across Europe, Latin America, the US, and Africa, built around shared values and convened through periodic transatlantic summits.
Useful specifically for the "organization travels" layer — it reaches lawmakers, not consumers. Value it as a policy channel rather than a distribution channel for the apps.
A global digital-campaigning platform running petitions in some fifty countries, with offices across Africa, Latin America, Oceania, and Europe, organized around "life, family, and liberty."
The one network that is itself a technology platform — the nearest reference point to your own model. Study how it localizes and mobilizes online; treat a formal tie-up carefully given its contested profile.
The international arm of a large US legal-advocacy group, litigating and lobbying on religious freedom, life, marriage and family, parental rights, and free speech — with offices in the UK, Germany, France, Belgium, Switzerland, and Austria, and a Latin America / Organization of American States practice.
Deep legal capacity across all three regions, but carries a hostile designation from at least one major US watchdog. Valuable as counsel; a visible variable if placed at the front of the brand.
Warmest reception, no language barrier, richest existing network — prove the model here.
ARC (London) is the anchor — one relationship that opens a seventy-nation room. Around it: CARE (Christian Action, Research and Education), a long-standing Christian public-policy and civic-education body that runs a well-known leadership programme, and ADF International's UK office for legal questions. Lead with the light apps — internet-literacy and family-safety — which need no localization here.
Strong parliamentary alignment exists (Canadian legislators sit on ARC's own board), but the named civil-society partner to carry deployments is the piece to identify on the ground. Treat Canada as ARC-adjacent in Phase I and confirm a local host organization before committing product.
A prominent network sits around figures like former Deputy Prime Minister John Anderson, who helped initiate ARC and runs a leading politico-cultural podcast. The obvious national civic body to evaluate is the country's established Christian-lobby organization — confirm current standing and fit before outreach rather than assuming it.
Where the sovereignty-plus-faith-plus-family frame lands hardest — and where localization and GDPR become real costs.
Ordo Iuris is the flagship: a Warsaw-based legal and strategic-litigation institute that anchors the Polish pro-family and pro-sovereignty scene and frequently originates international petition campaigns. It is the natural first conversation in the region.
Budapest is the region's hub — it recurs as the host city for the cross-regional summits above, backed by substantial government-adjacent pro-family infrastructure. Entry here is as much about the convening calendar as about any single organization: show up where the network already gathers.
Grassroots "family coalition" structures — the kind that formed across Romania, Croatia, and Slovakia around marriage referendums — are the template for how values organizing scales locally in this region. They are useful reference models for how a BBG-supported partner might be structured, even where they aren't direct partners.
The largest faith-and-family audience of all — reachable once Spanish and Portuguese localization is built.
Red Familia is the major national pro-family network and the natural Mexican anchor. It also plugs into the transatlantic legislator network above, giving one relationship both national and regional reach.
ADF International's Latin America practice (working through the Organization of American States) and Chilean-founded human-rights NGOs like Comunidad y Justicia supply regional legal infrastructure on life, family, parental rights, and religious freedom. CitizenGO's Latin America offices add digital-campaigning reach in Spanish.
Brazil's enormous evangelical civil-society and congressional base is the single largest values audience in the hemisphere, with parental-rights and homeschooling questions currently live in the courts. It needs Portuguese localization and a dedicated national partner — the reason Brazil anchors the last phase rather than the first.
Plot every candidate on two axes: reach and perception risk. Lead each phase from the brand-safe, big-tent corner — the ARC-type networks that share the four pillars without the most polarizing single-issue baggage. Treat the highest-reach, highest-controversy networks as multipliers to engage later, once you have proof points and a settled public posture.
Then use the differentiator in every room: you are not another advocacy voice competing for the same attention. You bring family-safety, internet-literacy, and civic-awareness tools these networks do not have. Open with infrastructure, not ideology — it's the offer nobody else at the table can make.