Timelines are powerful analytical tools for understanding how advocacy campaigns evolve over time, revealing how mobilization, framing, political opportunities, and coalition-building interact to produce impact. This Teaching Paper introduces comparative advocacy timelines as a structured method for NGOs to analyze past campaigns and design future strategies. Drawing on advocacy scholarship and practical examples, it demonstrates how timelines capture turning points, strategic sequencing, and adaptive responses. A case study of the global HIV/AIDS treatment campaign illustrates how legal framing, grassroots pressure, and global funding converged to achieve systemic policy change. The paper serves as both a pedagogical and strategic resource, linking analytical rigor with actionable insights for advocacy practitioners and researchers.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.