Hadeel Abdel Aziz

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EducationBachelor of Laws from the University of Jordan.
Certified as a judicial administrator by Michigan State University.
OccupationsFounder and Executive Director, JCLA
Court administration unit manager, USAID
Yearsactive2004 to present
OrganizationJCLA
Hadeel Abdel Aziz
هديل عبد العزيز
Hadeel Abdel Aziz 2023
EducationBachelor of Laws from the University of Jordan.
Certified as a judicial administrator by Michigan State University.
OccupationsFounder and Executive Director, JCLA
Court administration unit manager, USAID
Years active2004 to present
OrganizationJCLA
AwardsInternational Women of Courage Award.
Franco-German Prize for Human Rights and the Rule of Law.
Eisenhower Fellowships.
Websitewww.jcla-org.com/en

Hadeel Abdel Aziz (Arabic: هديل عبد العزيز) is a Jordanian Legal expert and human rights activist who is also a founding member and executive director of the Jordan-based NGO, Justice Center for Legal Aid (JCLA).[1][2][3][4] Her work includes advocating for judicial reform, court automation, and providing access to justice projects through a network of legal aid clinics that help others in civil, criminal, and family, including Sharia law.[5][3] On 8 March, she received the 2023 International Women of Courage Award,[6] which was presented to her and other nominees by Jill Biden and Anthony J. Blinken at the U.S. Department of State.[7][8][9] She is also the recipient of the Franco-German Prize for Human Rights and the Rule of Law award, which was presented to her during the 60th anniversary of the Elysée Treaty on 22 January 2023.[10][11]

Abdel Aziz holds a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Jordan and became the first Jordanian to be certified as a judicial administrator by Michigan State University.[12]

Career

Court administration unit manager

Before founding JCLA, Abdel Aziz worked for USAID from 2004 to 2009 as a Court Administration Unit manager for its Rule of Law Program.[13]

Her work under JCLA is reported as providing service for the underprivileged, advocating for state-funded legal aid with the overall focus on legal empowerment— ″putting the law in the hands of the average person″ through tools tailored to educate people on their fundamental rights and support communities to navigate and set-up solutions and tools.[1][3]

Human rights defender

As a frontline[6] defender of various marginalized groups including juveniles, refugees, migrants, and survivors of sexual and gender-based violence, DOS applauded Aziz for exhibiting a clear-sighted[6] vision to help strengthen the justice system in Jordan. Her advocacy work against honor crimes- detaining women for their own “protection” was also highlighted. As a board of Trustees at the National Center for Human Rights, she highlighted the importance of details in rights-based issues to young Jordanian reporters.[14][15]

Women, children, and victims of terrorism

Her other effort includes advocating for the abolishment of the controversial Jordan's rape law, Article 308, and help enforcing the persecution of criminals.[16][17][18][19] She highlighted her work in a distinguished panel at the UN[20] and participated in World Bank-sponsored projects, and other platforms.[21][22][23][24] At the UN panel, she discussed the importance of accessing justice for victims of terrorism during the Global Congress of Victims of Terrorism event.[20]

Migrant workers

For the ongoing issue of migrant workers[25] and decry against the abuses of Jordanian employers, Abdel Aziz recognized the gap, stated the repatriation of nine abused Filipinos domestic helpers, and discussed challenges in the implementation of law and tools.[26]

International support

In 2015, the World Bank selected JCLA and Abdel Aziz to provide the Nigerian government with technical support in which she engaged with a series of legal aid capacity-building and quality assurance workshops in Nigeria.[27][21][28]

Awards and fellowship

See also

References

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