Needs-assessment with stakeholders
Assesses whether the organization conducts systematic, mixed-method needs and assets assessments with community stakeholders (including marginalised groups) to ensure its welfare and health services are relevant, safe, accessible, effective, and co-designed where appropriate. This collaborative approach embodies the Islamic principle of shura (mutual consultation), ensuring interventions address the community's true maslahah (public interest). Engaging vulnerable populations helps fulfill the Maqasid al-Shariah (objectives of Islamic law) aimed at hifz al-nafs (preservation of life) and upholding human dignity.
Maslahah (Public Interest)
A principle that obliges aligning programs and policies with genuine community benefit, ensuring they secure people's essential interests.
Sadd al-dharā’iʿ (Blocking the means)
Where engagement could lead to harm (re-traumatisation, exposure, stigma), adopt preventative controls to block these outcomes.
Informed Governance
The principle of safeguarding public welfare through informed oversight and consultative mechanisms before taking action.
'Urf (Local Custom/Norms)
The principle that local customs and known needs should be considered in social and administrative matters, as long as they do not contradict a clear text.
Maqāṣid al-Sharī‘ah
Needs assessments operationalise maqāṣid by evidencing where services protect life/health, intellect, family, and wealth.
Shura (Consultation)
The requirement for leaders to actively engage those affected by services so that decisions reflect lived realities.
Stewardship
The ethical maxim that every leader is a guardian responsible for the welfare of their community or 'flock'.
Related Criteria
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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