Effective Complaint Handling & Product Recall Protocol
This criterion assesses the organization's effectiveness in handling customer complaints and managing product recalls in a just, transparent, and welfare-oriented manner. It evaluates the existence of a clearly defined and documented protocol for addressing customer grievances, investigating product defects, and executing recalls when necessary. The protocol must include a mandatory 'Complaint-to-Safety Signal' decision tree and risk matrix (severity × likelihood × detectability) with clear triggers for stop-sale, regulator notification, and public recall. It requires a written Delegation of Authority (DoA) empowering coordinators to enact immediate stop-sale/quarantine measures to minimize harm (la ḍarar). The system must ensure end-to-end traceability (batch/lot level) capable of identifying affected stock/customers within 4 hours (2 hours for food). It mandates a 'Vulnerability Support SOP' to identify and assist vulnerable customers, ensuring equitable access to remedies. The organization must uphold the prohibition of deception (ghish) through transparent disclosure and prohibit internal concealment via a protected speak-up route. The process includes a formal two-stage complaint resolution pathway with ADR signposting, periodic mock recall drills with specific performance metrics, and strict adherence to data protection (UK GDPR) and statutory duties (GPSR, Food Safety Act, CRA 2015).
La ḍarar wa la ḍirār (لا ضرر ولا ضرار)
'There should be neither harming nor reciprocating harm.' This mandates the immediate removal of unsafe products (recall) and justifies the 'stop-sale' authority given to safety coordinators.
Al-Ghunm bil-ghurm (الغنم بالغرم)
'Gain accompanies liability.' The organization, having profited from the product, must bear the full cost of the recall and remedy (shipping, disposal, replacement), and must not shift this burden to the consumer.
Khiyār al-‘ayb (خيار العيب)
'Option due to defect.' A buyer has the automatic right to rescind a sale or seek a remedy if a defect is found. The protocol must facilitate this right (refund/replace) without undue bureaucratic hurdles.
Sadd al-dharā’i (سد الذرائع)
'Blocking the means.' Justifies precautionary recalls and safety alerts where harm is plausible but not yet confirmed, prioritizing safety over profit.
Maṣlaḥah Mursalah (المصلحة المرسلة)
Public interest. Effective complaint/recall systems protect the broader community and maintain market trust.
Adl
Justice/Fairness. Requires impartial investigation of complaints and equitable remedies for all customers.
Amanah
Trust. Product safety is a trust placed by the consumer in the seller; violating it requires immediate rectification.
Naṣīḥah
Sincere Counsel. Viewing complaints as valuable advice to improve, rather than a nuisance.
Related Criteria
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📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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