[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.
[1][3] 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.
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.
[26] 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] Abdel Aziz obtained funding from the Eisenhower Fellowships[29] to implement a country-wide Pro bono program[27] that partners with the Jordanian legal system and serves the underrepresented.