Trauma-aware training for legal teams working under pressure

Practical, evidence-informed CPD and in-house training that helps lawyers strengthen judgement, communication and client practice in high-demand environments

CPD-eligible | Tailored for legal teams | In-house or online

Why this matters

Lawyers experience significantly higher rates of psychological distress, anxiety, depression, stress and vicarious trauma than both the general population and many other professions.

Legal work is one of the highest trauma-exposure environments of any profession. Research consistently shows that lawyers experience psychological distress at significantly higher rates than the general population — in some studies, higher than mental health professionals.

At the same time, most of the people who walk through your door are carrying unresolved trauma. Up to 70% of Australian adults have experienced a traumatic event in their lifetime. In family law, criminal law, DV, migration and community legal settings, that proportion approaches near-certainty.

When neither side of the table has a framework for what is happening in the room, the legal encounter can compound harm — for the client, and quietly, for the practitioner.

This training gives your team that framework.

Impacts of this silent crisis

The regulatory reality

Inaction is no longer a neutral position.
In Kozarov v Victoria HCA 09, the High Court confirmed that employers have a legal duty of care to take reasonable steps to prevent foreseeable psychiatric injury — including vicarious trauma — in high-exposure workplaces. In 2023, Court Services Victoria was prosecuted and fined $380,000 following the death of a solicitor who had raised concerns about her trauma exposure without receiving adequate support. Psychosocial hazard regulations now apply across Australian jurisdictions. Managing vicarious trauma risk is a legal compliance matter — not only a wellbeing one.
This work focuses on strengthening professional capacity, supporting ethical judgement, attentiveness and human-centred legal practice.

Ways to work together

60–90 minute lunch-and-learn


A focused, practical introduction to trauma awareness in legal and advisory contexts. Ideal for whole-team CPD, practice group sessions, or lunch-and-learn programs. Available in-person or online. A good first step for firms exploring this area.

Half-day workshop


A deeper session that moves through the evidence, nervous system literacy, practical skills and team application. Includes time for reflection, questions and integration. Suited to leadership teams, practice groups or cross-team CPD days.

Multi-session series


For firms wanting sustained development. A short series (typically 3 sessions) builds capacity over time — moving from awareness through to application and embedding across practice and culture. Tailored to practice area and seniority.

Practice and service design review


For firms wanting to look beyond individual training. A structured review of how client touchpoints, intake processes, workflows and team practices either support or undermine safety and clarity — for clients and staff.

Areas commonly explored

Depending on context, sessions may explore topics such as:

The Neuroscience of Stress

How stress physiology affects judgement, attention and risk perception in legal work

Vicarious Trauma vs. Burnout

Understanding the difference, recognising the signs, and responding effectively

Trauma-Informed Engagement

Communication and interviewing approaches that reduce escalation and improve outcomes

Operationalising Duty of Care

Embedding trauma-aware practice into workflows, supervision and team culture

Topics can be claimed under CPD training categories including Ethics and professional responsibility, Professional skills, and Practice management and business skills.

Trauma-informed practice needs to be embedded in how work actually happens, rather than being placed solely on the shoulders of individual staff members.

Beyond individual training

Is your practice designed to work with people under pressure — or against them?

Training builds individual awareness. But when the systems around people stay unchanged — the intake process, the waiting room, the letters you send, the way instructions are taken — the gap between intention and impact stays open.

The Trauma-Informed Practice Review is a structured consulting engagement that looks at how your firm functions from the inside out. It examines your client touch-points, processes, communication practices and team structures through a service design lens — identifying where your current design supports safety, clarity and trust, and where it may be creating unnecessary friction, confusion or risk.

This is not a compliance checklist.
It is a considered, evidence-informed examination of how your organisation actually operates for the people in it and the people it serves.

When firms are genuinely trauma-informed at a systems level, they typically see:

Every review is tailored to your context, size and practice area.
The first step is a conversation.

Group of staff sitting around a desk, One man is talking with expressive hand gusture

Our change partners

Testimonials

What participants say

About your facilitator

Jax Wechsler is one of Australia’s leading practitioners in trauma-informed design and practice.

With over 20 years working in complex, high-stakes human service environments — including child protection, disability, Indigenous place-based programs and legal contexts — she brings rigour, warmth and directness to training that many organisations find difficult to approach.

She has trained over 1,000 practitioners globally, co-authored Designed with Care: Creating Trauma-Informed Content, and teaches at UTS. Her work is grounded in nervous system literacy, somatic awareness and systems thinking — translated into practical professional capability.

Jax is not a therapist. She is a practitioner, educator and designer who has spent two decades understanding how stress, trauma and relational safety shape the way organisations function — and what it takes to change that.

“This work is about strengthening the conditions that support clear thinking and sound decision-making, especially when stakes are high and pressure is constant.”

The evidence for change

Trauma in Legal Practice

 A free white paper for legal professionals and firm leaders covering the Australian data on trauma risk for legal staff, who is walking through your door, and what trauma-informed practice actually means for your team.

Common questions

Is this relevant for commercial lawyers, not just family or criminal law?

Yes. While the evidence is strongest in high-exposure practice areas, stress physiology shapes every client interaction, negotiation and team relationship. The concepts are universal; the application is tailored to your context.

Neither. This training does not ask lawyers to process their own trauma or clients to disclose theirs. It builds professional understanding of how trauma and chronic stress affect behaviour, communication and cognition — so lawyers can respond more effectively.

Yes. Sessions are accredited across Ethics and Professional Responsibility, Professional Skills, and Practice Management and Business Skills.

It works well for all levels — from graduates and juniors through to senior associates, partners and practice managers. For leadership-level work, content is adapted accordingly.

Most begin with a lunch-and-learn or half-day workshop for a practice group or whole team. That gives the team a shared experience and language, and often leads to further work.

Before any session, we have a short conversation about your practice area, client cohort and what is most live for your team. Content is then adapted accordingly. You do not receive a generic training package.

In legal settings, sustained pressure affects more than individual wellbeing. It influences outcomes at team, organisational and client level, retention and culture.

Ready to explore this for your team?

A short conversation is the best first step. We can discuss your firm’s context and recommend the right format and scope.

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