Social Contribution & Witness (Da'wah bi'l-ḥāl) Strategy
Assesses if the organization strategically frames its services and social action as its primary means of demonstrating Islamic values (like compassion, justice, excellence) to the wider community, embodying the principle of "witness through action". Witness is expressed through unconditional, needs‑based service without coercion or making access contingent on religious adherence, in line with UK public benefit and humanitarian principles.
| Metric | Da'wah bi'l-ḥāl Strategy Composite Score |
|---|---|
| Target | See components |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
| Method | Composite of Strategy Deployment %, Training Competency %, Compliance Spot-Checks %, and Stakeholder Trust Score |
| Unit | Percentage/Score |
Level 1: Initial/Ad-hoc
Social contribution activities are ad-hoc and not consciously linked to demonstrating Islamic values. They are seen as general charity, separate from the organization's core identity or mission.
Level 2: Developing
There is an informal awareness that social action can reflect well on the organization and Islam. Some projects are anecdotally framed this way, but there is no consistent strategy or organizational policy.
Level 3: Established
A formal, documented strategy exists that explicitly links social contribution and community service to the principle of 'Da'wah bi'l-ḥāl'. Key Islamic values (e.g., justice, compassion, excellence) to be demonstrated are identified and communicated internally.
Level 4: Advanced
The strategy is consistently implemented across all relevant programs. The organization actively measures the impact of its social action on community perception and uses feedback from beneficiaries and stakeholders to refine its approach.
Level 5: Optimizing
The organization is a recognized leader in embodying 'witness through action'. Its social contribution model is used as a benchmark, and it actively shares best practices. There is demonstrable evidence that its work has positively influenced the wider community's perception of Islam.
Organisation Types
By Organisation Size
| Size | Applicability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Micro | exempt | Formal dashboards, KPIs, and competency training logs with remediation are disproportionate for volunteer-run groups. |
| Small | partial | A simple strategy on a page is good practice, but formal quarterly KPI dashboards and competency assessments should be omitted or highly simplified. |
| Medium | partial | Requires a documented strategy and regular board reporting, but formal training logs with pass rates and remediation can be scaled down. |
| Large | full | |
| Major | full |
Applicable When
- The organization engages in direct service provision or social action
- The organization's services directly impact the broader community
- The organization's leadership is committed to reflecting Islamic values through its actions
Not Applicable When
- The organization's primary focus is internal religious practice (e.g., purely prayer space focused mosque)
- The organization is a purely commercial enterprise with no explicit social mission
- The organization is not engaged in any form of outreach or interaction with the broader non-Muslim community
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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