The body and brain’s normal responses to traumatic stress can result in changes to cognition, emotion, affect, and behavior. Beyond these biological and psychological effects, trauma can also impact our relationships with each other and with our institutions, histories, and social structures. This informs how people who have experienced trauma relate to our organizations. Our society’s historical and contemporary maldistribution of wealth, resources, and safety for people with minoritized identities means that this has urgent social justice implications as well. In working with trauma-impacted communities, we need tools and practices that will permit us to account for the multilevel impacts of trauma and work towards healing our communities and our practices. The workshop will begin with an introduction to trauma, an explanation of what we mean by a multi-level trauma-informed approach, and an explanation of trauma-informed principles and practices. We will then lead a group discussion about the relationship between trauma-informed practices and social justice priorities, and finish by collectively exploring specific tools and approaches that can be used in participants’ daily work. The facilitators bring an interdisciplinary understanding of trauma-informed practices, informed by extensive experience in the field as well as backgrounds in social work, anthropology, epidemiology, and medicine.