Embodied Justice Advisory is a human rights consulting firm specializing in trauma-informed, intersectional approaches to organizational change, policy development, and community advocacy. We partner with nonprofits, advocacy organizations, legal firms, and community groups to embed dignity, equity, and justice into their practices, policies, and culture.
Our work centers marginalized communities—particularly those navigating systems of oppression related to gender, sexuality, race, immigration status, and economic vulnerability. We bring a unique blend of clinical expertise, somatic and therapeutic frameworks, and rights-based advocacy to create sustainable, embodied change.
Nijeria Jones is a Licensed Professional Counselor and board-registered supervisor in Virginia with over eight years of experience in mental health, sexology, and advocacy, bringing a background in psychology, sociology, liberal studies, sexology, and energy healing alongside advanced training in somatic sex therapy, anxiety and trauma treatment, relationship and intimacy coaching, and immigration evaluations. Through leading Sexhale Services and founding The DESIRE+ Collective, she has designed and facilitated liberatory spaces focused on embodiment, the reclamation of desire, and support for Black women, queer communities, and other marginalized groups impacted by systems of harm. Embodied Justice Advisory is the integration of her clinical insight, human rights education, nonprofit leadership, and court-ready evaluation work.
To support nonprofits, advocacy groups, legal professionals, and organizations in embedding human rights, equity, and embodied, trauma-informed practice into their policies, culture, and immigration processes—so that marginalized and system-impacted people experience safety, dignity, and liberation in real, tangible ways.
A world where human rights are not just principles on paper but lived realities—where organizations, courts, and communities honor embodiment, intersectionality, and desire, and where immigrants, survivors, and marginalized communities are believed, protected, and empowered to thrive.
Intersectionality - Centering the lived experiences of those facing multiple, overlapping systems of oppression.
Embodiment - Recognizing that justice work must honor the body, trauma, and healing.
Dignity - Upholding the inherent worth and rights of every individual.
Liberation - Working toward systemic transformation, not just incremental reform.
Collaboration - Building with communities, not for them.