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 Financial Law: Not-For-Profit

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

6 modules 9 topics
View course outline Find your level

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

A modern building facade with an ornate golden screen
Photo · Mohammed Alim / Unsplash

Why this course matters

A professional perspective
Not-for-profit financial contracts are essential to the everyday architecture of the Islamic economy: custody of assets, charitable and community funds, benevolent loans, guarantees, collateral arrangements, gifts, and the transfer of debts. This course builds the legal literacy needed to recognise how amanah, wadiyya, ariyya, hawala, kafala, qard, rahn, and heba are formed, what conditions affect them, and how rights, duties, and liabilities are allocated between parties. These capabilities matter for professionals working with Islamic banks and finance providers, awqaf and charities, zakat and community institutions, family offices, fintech platforms, governance teams, compliance functions, and dispute-resolution settings. Students learn to analyse contractual structures with care, identify operational risks, and support organisations in designing trustworthy, ethically coherent financial relationships.
Through the lens of faith
This course approaches Islamic financial law as a field of beneficial knowledge (ʿilm nāfiʿ): knowledge that clarifies responsibilities, protects trust, and helps wealth serve lawful and humane purposes. The contracts studied here are not merely technical instruments; they express moral concerns central to the maqāsid al-Sharīʿah, including the preservation of wealth, the safeguarding of rights, the prevention of harm, and the encouragement of generosity and social support. Amanah and wadiyya cultivate trustworthiness; qard and heba remind us of benevolence; rahn, kafala, and hawala show how obligations can be secured and organised with fairness. By studying these principles carefully and humbly, students deepen their awareness of accountability before the Creator and responsibility toward people, property, and the wider 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