Islamic.University

Building human capital for an ethical ecosystem

Scholar-governed, intelligent learning for Islamic business, finance and the social economy.

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Islamic.University

Islamic.University is an EdTech platform by PT IBF Net Indonesia for the higher-education ecosystem — not a degree- or diploma-granting university.

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Islamic.University
Course overview

Islamic Economics (Principles)

Scholar-governed, three-level learning with an Intelligent Tutor on every page.

12 modules 26 topics
View course outline Find your level

Earn a verifiable micro-credential for each level you complete.See a sample →

A mosque's dome and roof rising against an open sky
Photo · Mohammed Alim / Unsplash

Why this course matters

A professional perspective
This course builds the conceptual foundation needed to work thoughtfully across the Islamic economy. You will examine Islamic economics as a moral and social system, not merely a set of financial products, and learn how its principles shape economic behaviour, wealth creation, cooperation, governance, and welfare. By comparing Islamic economic philosophy with conventional economics, you develop the ability to question assumptions, analyse incentives, and assess policies or organisational practices through a values-based lens. These capabilities matter in Islamic finance, halal enterprise, charitable and waqf institutions, public policy, development work, compliance, governance, and social-impact organisations. The course also prepares you to engage contemporary challenges with clarity: how markets, institutions, and communities can pursue prosperity while remaining attentive to justice, accountability, and social cohesion.
Through the lens of faith
Studying Islamic economics can be part of the pursuit of beneficial knowledge (ʿilm nāfiʿ): knowledge that refines understanding and improves conduct. This course connects economic life to foundational Islamic meanings—Tawḥīd, prophetic guidance, accountability, and the view that resources are a trust to be used with care. It introduces the maqāṣid al-Sharīʿah as a framework for understanding welfare, including the protection of faith, life, intellect, family, and wealth. Through themes such as justice, iḥsān, cooperation, lawful earning, prevention of harm, and responsible stewardship, students see economics as a field of moral responsibility, not value-neutral technique. The aim is not to issue legal verdicts, but to cultivate disciplined reflection on how economic choices relate to our duties before the Creator and our responsibilities toward creation.

How to proceed

1

Find your level

Take the short diagnostic so each topic starts you at the right depth.

2

Study the topics

Work through the modules at Basic, Intermediate or Advanced level — your choice.

3

Check your understanding

Take the topic quiz, and ask the Tutor anything as you go.

Start with the outline Read the full learner guide