Entrepreneurship workshops and advisory support (Sharīʿah-aligned)
Evaluating the provision of expert-led workshops and advisory services that foster entrepreneurship, this measure is vital for Islamic excellence. It empowers community members toward self-sufficiency through lawful enterprise, strengthening economic resilience, preventing market harm (iḥtikār), and advancing public interest (maṣlaḥah). By cultivating business acumen, these initiatives fulfill farḍ kifāyah (communal obligation) regarding economic independence, promoting taʿāwun (mutual cooperation) and ensuring commerce remains rooted in kasb ṭayyib (pure earning) for broader societal welfare.
Hisbah
Prophetic-state practices around market organization and oversight to enable fair trade and prevent injustice.
Al-Ghurm bil Ghunm
Benefit is entitled by liability/risk. Essential for teaching Shariah-compliant business models.
Al-Kharaj bi al-Daman
Entitlement to return is by bearing liability; justifies profit from equity/trade while prohibiting Riba.
Al-Muslimun ‘ala Shurutihim
Muslims are bound by their conditions; grounds contractual integrity in business.
La Darar wa la Dirar
The principle of 'no harm'. Guides ethical business practices to avoid causing detriment.
Gharar
Excessive uncertainty or ambiguity in contracts, prohibited in Islamic finance.
Maṣlaḥah
Public interest, advanced by equipping community members with lawful means of livelihood.
Ihtikar
Hoarding or market manipulation, which is prohibited to ensure fair pricing and access.
Barakah
Divine blessing, sought through promoting halal and ethical enterprise.
Halal
That which is permissible and lawful according to Islamic law.
Related Criteria
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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