Platform map
Dog Haven Group Universe shows how the global ownership, travel, tools, learning and country sections fit together.
Explore the Dog Haven Group platform map across World Atlas, Global Travel, Lab tools, Academy guides, Journal insights, downloads, and countries.
How the platform fits together
The Dog Haven Group Universe includes the World Atlas, Global Travel, Route Guides, Lab, Academy, Journal, Download Library and Country Network. Each section has a role. The Atlas compares countries, Travel organises movement, Lab turns decisions into tools, Academy teaches, Journal publishes researched context and the Country Network routes readers into local sites.
A serious mother site needs this structure because dog ownership is no longer only local for many families. People move countries, compare costs, travel with dogs, rent apartments, plan around climates, and look for trustworthy education that does not collapse into either vague inspiration or unsupported claims.

Global research and local editorial responsibility
Dog Haven Group can compare broad themes such as housing pressure, climate, transport, public access, veterinary planning, costs and travel friction. Local country sites explain how those themes are experienced in practice. A score or global summary cannot replace local detail, and local material should not be copied between countries where rules, services, culture and everyday routines differ.
Research work should show its assumptions and limits. Cost tools use planning ranges rather than official prices. Travel guidance separates organisation from legal approval. Academy material is educational and does not diagnose individual dogs. When a decision depends on current law, transport policy, or health, the reader should be directed to the relevant official source or qualified professional.
The research methodology explains this approach, while the editorial policy sets standards for clarity, originality, corrections, and responsible uncertainty.
Expansion without duplicated country content
A new country site needs a distinct audience and enough local knowledge to answer real questions. The group site should not compete with it by reproducing local articles, and the country site should not mirror global pages merely to look complete. Instead, the two layers should link to one another where the reader’s question changes from global comparison to local action.
That separation keeps the network useful as it grows. Someone comparing countries can stay in the World Atlas. Someone preparing a cross-border move can work through Global Travel. Someone who needs local ownership context can choose an established gateway through the country network.
