Templates
Community & Nonprofit
Human Rights Nonprofit
Advocate - Compelling Humanrights Landing Page Template
Advocate is a single-column landing page template built for human rights research and policy institutes. It opens with a full-viewport survivor manifesto, then guides visitors through mission, evidence, and impact before inviting them to give. The warm editorial design, structured donation form, and secondary email-capture path make it equally effective for donors, lawyers, journalists, and grant-makers.
by Rocket studio
Advocate is a donation-focused landing page template for human rights research and policy institutes. It builds trust section by section, moving from a survivor manifesto through impact evidence to a structured giving form. The design is warm and editorial, the copy architecture earns each click, and every section serves a specific audience: constitutional lawyers, foundation officers, journalists, and diaspora communities.
This template is built for organizations that turn survivor testimony and field data into accountability. It works best when credibility must be earned before a visitor will give, partner, or publish.
Most nonprofit landing pages ask for trust before they have earned it. Visitors arrive skeptical, skim a generic hero image, and leave before they read the work. Advocate is designed to close that gap.
You get a complete single-column landing page structured as a narrative case. Each section deepens trust before asking for anything in return.




Theme
Community Hearth
Creative direction
Vision & Mission
Color system
Cloud Canvas
Style
Single Column Flow
Direction
Donation/Fundraising
Page Sections
Full-viewport Survivor Manifesto
Landmark Reports Timeline
Policy-change Narrative Cards
Structured Donation Form with Presets
Fixed Bottom Donation Bar
Secondary Email-capture Section
Who is the primary audience this template is built for?
Can I adjust the preset donation amounts in the giving form?
Does the template include a way to capture visitors who are not ready to donate?
How does the fixed bottom bar work on mobile devices?
Can this template support organizations focused on specific regions or conflicts?
This template is built around a small set of purposeful components. Each one serves a specific function in the trust-to-conversion journey.
The page opens with a single sentence set in large unhurried serif type against bare parchment. A thin terracotta rule and a name, country, and year attribution sit below it. There is no image and no decoration, only the weight of the words and the silence around them.
A chronological timeline displays the institute's most significant publications. It gives lawyers, journalists, and grant-makers a scannable record of sustained output without requiring them to navigate away from the page.
Asymmetric bento-style cards trace each documented policy change back to a specific research finding. They are the strongest proof element on the page, showing that the work has already changed law.
The form offers preset giving amounts tied to concrete outcomes, for example funding a survivor interview transcription or supporting a freedom-of-information filing. A monthly and one-time toggle and a single optional dedication field keep the form simple and specific.
A persistent bar appears as the visitor scrolls and surfaces the primary call to action at every point on the page. It ensures the giving option is always one tap or click away without interrupting the reading experience.
A latest report section offers a lower-commitment path for visitors not yet ready to donate. It collects email addresses and begins building the pipeline from engaged reader to future donor.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Survivor Manifesto Hero | Opens with emotional weight and immediate credibility |
| Belief & Mission | States the institute's credo and what it produces |
| Landmark Reports Timeline | Proves sustained, documented output over time |
| Impact Evidence Map | Shows geographic scope of testimony gathering |
| Policy-Change Cards | Traces law changes back to specific research findings |
| Donation Call to Action | Converts trust into a structured, tangible gift |
| Latest Report Capture | Collects emails from readers not yet ready to give |
| Footer | Provides navigation, logo, and tagline in a split layout |
The visual identity follows a Community Hearth theme using a warm, editorial palette. Every color choice reinforces the feeling of a well-worn leather folio left open on a wooden desk, unhurried and deeply human.
The template is built desktop-first with a strong mobile experience, reflecting the reality that lawyers and journalists read on both. Scroll-linked reveals and staggered text animations use client-side rendering only where needed.
Advocate earns the click before it asks for one. The page is structured as a case being built, and each section adds a layer of evidence before presenting any call to action.
This template is designed for a global English-speaking audience with United States dollar amounts, month/day/year date formatting, and a human rights context that spans multiple countries and legal systems.