Modern-slavery supply-chain audit
Evaluates the organization's due diligence in auditing its supply chain for modern slavery. This is critical for upholding ʿAdl (justice) and Ḥifẓ al‑Nafs (protection of life). Allah commands justice and excellence: “Indeed Allah orders ʿadl and iḥsān…” (Quran 16:90). This frames modern-slavery due diligence as a duty of institutional iḥsān—designing systems that prevent harm, not merely reacting to incidents, safeguarding vulnerable workers from zulm (oppression) and protecting the organization's ethical integrity.
Al-Ḥisbah
An institutional duty of market oversight to prevent coercion, fraud, and exploitation in trade.
Sadd al-Dharāʾiʿ
Blocking the means to evil; proactively auditing supply chains prevents the sin of zulm.
Lā ḍarar wa lā ḍirār
No harm and no reciprocating harm; guides survivor-centred remediation to ensure actions do not worsen the victim's situation.
Al-Muslimūn ʿalā shurūṭihim
Muslims are bound by their conditions; justifies the enforcement of Supplier Codes of Conduct.
ʿAdl
Justice; preventing oppression in transactional chains.
Iḥsān
Excellence; going beyond compliance to proactively prevent harm.
Ḥifẓ al‑Nafs
Protection of life; safeguarding individuals from exploitation.
Amānah
Trust; ensuring commercial activities do not cause harm.
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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