This one-on-one consultation is designed for individuals, teams, or organizations seeking thoughtful guidance on harm reduction, trauma-informed practice, and equity-centered service delivery.
Drawing on frontline and lived experience, policy analysis, and abolitionist frameworks, these sessions help unpack common assumptions that shape how we approach people who use drugs, poverty, housing instability, and community care. Together we examine how systems such as carceral logic, stigma, respectability politics, and individualism influence everyday practice and how we respond to behaviours often labelled as “high-risk” when they fall outside dominant social norms.
Sessions are collaborative and practical. Participants are invited to reflect on current challenges, ask difficult questions, and explore tangible strategies that move beyond charity models toward dignity-based, relationship-centered approaches.
This consultation may include:
Case consultation and ethical decision-making support
Harm reduction and overdose response best practices
Navigating stigma, bias, and deficit narratives in service settings
Applying trauma-informed principles without carceral or punitive frameworks
Strategies to reduce burnout while strengthening relational care
Each session is tailored to the needs of the participant or team, with the goal of supporting practices that prioritize dignity, safety, and collective wellbeing.
This one-on-one consultation is designed for individuals, teams, or organizations seeking thoughtful guidance on harm reduction, trauma-informed practice, and equity-centered service delivery.
Drawing on frontline and lived experience, policy analysis, and abolitionist frameworks, these sessions help unpack common assumptions that shape how we approach people who use drugs, poverty, housing instability, and community care. Together we examine how systems such as carceral logic, stigma, respectability politics, and individualism influence everyday practice and how we respond to behaviours often labelled as “high-risk” when they fall outside dominant social norms.
Sessions are collaborative and practical. Participants are invited to reflect on current challenges, ask difficult questions, and explore tangible strategies that move beyond charity models toward dignity-based, relationship-centered approaches.
This consultation may include:
Case consultation and ethical decision-making support
Harm reduction and overdose response best practices
Navigating stigma, bias, and deficit narratives in service settings
Applying trauma-informed principles without carceral or punitive frameworks
Strategies to reduce burnout while strengthening relational care
Each session is tailored to the needs of the participant or team, with the goal of supporting practices that prioritize dignity, safety, and collective wellbeing.