Her memoir
Shame (2007) was a Times Top 10 Bestseller and described in the
House of Lords as a "political weapon". She is widely recognised for publicising the problem of
forced marriage. The then Prime Minister,
David Cameron, said her work "turned my head on the issue of forced marriage". Her work is recognised as a key contributory factor to the creation of a specific UK forced-marriage criminal offence in 2014. Dame Jasvinder is an expert witness in courts in child, civil and criminal proceedings. She is the Independent Chair of the Leeds Safeguarding Children Partnership and chair of Domestic Homicide Reviews. She was a member of the three-person Independent Safeguarding Board for the
Church of England, until all three appointments were terminated by the
Archbishops' Council in June 2023. She was awarded an
honorary doctorate (HonDUniv) by the
University of Derby in 2009. She was awarded The Pride of Britain Award in 2009 and was named Cosmopolitan Ultimate Woman of the Year in 2010. In 2011, she was listed in the Guardian’s top 100 Most Inspirational Women in the World and in 2012 received the Global Punjabi Award. In the
2013 Queen's Birthday Honours, she was appointed
Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for services to victims of forced marriage and honour-based violence and promoted to a Dame Commander (DBE) in the same order in the
2024 Birthday Honours. In 2014, was awarded Legal Campaigner of the Year. Dame Jasvinder is also listed in the 2016 edition of the book ''Who's Who'' and in the same year received the International Woman Award for human rights from the Italian media. In 2018, she was awarded Honorary Doctor of Law by
De Montfort University, Leicester and Woman of the Year by Leeds City Council and in 2019 she was awarded the
Robert Burns Humanitarian of the Year Award and also the Sikh Woman of Substance Award. ==Publications==