In an era where artificial intelligence shapes our financial decisions and Islamic finance emerges as a $4 trillion global force, an unexpected alliance is forming. To understand this convergence, it is useful to first clarify terminology: Islamic finance, as defined by Daud Vicary of DVA IFA, represents “the effective mobilisation of capital in favor of the real economy,” while Prosocial AI encompasses “AI Systems that are tailored, trained, tested and targeted to bring out the best in and for people and planet.” Both domains, though arising from different contexts, share a fundamental commitment to ethical principles, social justice, and human wellbeing that could reshape how we think about technology’s role in finance.
Moral Foundations
At its core, Islamic finance operates on principles that go far beyond profit maximization. The prohibition of riba (usury), gharar (excessive uncertainty) and mysir (gambling) in investments mirrors the principles of prosocial AI, which advocates for AI systems that are centered on human values and motivated by regenerative intent with respect to people and planet.
Consider the Islamic principle of maslaha (public interest ) which is akin to “do unto others as you would have done to yourself” and reflects the Golden Rule that has found entry into belief systems around the world. Every financial transaction must contribute to societal wellbeing, not merely generate returns. This alignment with prosocial AI isn’t coincidental — both frameworks recognize that unchecked pursuit of efficiency or profit can lead to societal harm. Whereas a deliberate stance toward shared value is a win-win-win-win – for the people we are, the communities we belong to, the countries we are part of and the planet we depend on.
Hybrid Intelligence: The Natural Bridge
The concept of hybrid intelligence — arising from the complementarity of natural and artificial intelligences — offers a compelling solution to the apparent tension between traditional Islamic finance and AI innovation. This approach recognizes that while AI excels at processing vast amounts of data and identifying patterns, human intelligence brings contextual understanding, moral reasoning, and cultural sensitivity that remain irreplaceable.
In Islamic finance, this hybrid model is particularly valuable. Traditional scholars can provide the interpretive framework and ethical oversight, while AI systems handle routine compliance checking, risk assessment, and pattern recognition. For instance, an AI system might identify potentially non-compliant transactions based on predetermined criteria, but human scholars would make the final determination about complex cases requiring contextual judgment.
This collaboration can amplify the role of Islamic scholarship; it amplifies it. By automating routine tasks, AI frees scholars to focus on more complex interpretive work and strategic guidance. The result is a system that is both more efficient and aligned with Islamic principles. Academic institutions like the International Centre for Education in Islamic Finance in Malaysia can play an interesting role in curating this convergence. As Malaysia’s global university for Islamic finance, INCEIF has been at the forefront of researching how emerging technologies can enhance Shariah-compliant financial services while maintaining their ethical foundations.
Practical Convergence In Action
The intersection of Islamic finance and prosocial AI isn’t merely philosophical. Kuwait Finance House launched Tam Digital Bank in 2023, demonstrating how AI can serve Islamic banking principles. Meanwhile, research from institutions like INCEIF shows that AI applications offer potential benefits such as automation, improved decision-making, customer recommendations, and enhanced customer experience—all while maintaining Shariah compliance. Apps such as NurAI, a fully Sharia compliant App that was launched at the ASEAN AI Summit last week is one example of the interplay between religious wisdom and high-tech.
The beauty lies in how deliberately AI-systems that are curated with a prosocial mindset can strengthen Islamic finance’s commitment to transparency and fairness. Traditional Islamic finance requires extensive documentation to ensure compliance with Islamic law, but AI can streamline this process while maintaining the ethical oversight that Shariah principles demand. AI-driven algorithms can analyze customer behavior and preferences, allowing financial institutions to offer tailored products while ensuring compliance and security are significantly improved.
Shared Values, Amplified Impact
Both systems emphasize risk-sharing over risk-shifting. Islamic finance’s prohibition of gharar (excessive uncertainty) aligns perfectly with prosocial AI’s emphasis on transparency and explainability. When an AI system makes a credit decision or investment recommendation, the reasoning must be clear and justifiable — principles that Islamic scholars have upheld for centuries.
The concept of takaful (mutual guarantee) in Islamic insurance finds its technological cousin in AI systems designed for collective benefit. Both recognize that individual prosperity is meaningless without community wellbeing. The Win-win-win-win logic comes to play once more.
Overcoming Challenges Through Hybrid Models And Double Literacy
The marriage isn’t without complications. Traditional Islamic finance relies heavily on human scholars for interpretation and oversight, while AI operates through algorithms that can seem like black boxes. One part of the equation lies in designing AI systems that support agency amid AI, and coach the individual ability and volition for critical thinking. judgment. Islamic finance has always required contextual understanding and moral reasoning that pure algorithmic processing cannot provide. Prosocial AI, when properly implemented through hybrid intelligence frameworks, can handle routine compliance checking and pattern recognition while preserving the essential human oversight that Islamic law requires.
Central to this hybrid approach is the need for double literacy—fluency in both Islamic finance principles and AI capabilities. Financial professionals must understand not only the intricacies of Shariah compliance, risk-sharing mechanisms, and ethical investment criteria, but also how AI algorithms function, their limitations, and their potential for bias. Similarly, AI developers working in Islamic finance must grasp the philosophical foundations of concepts like maslaha (public interest) and the practical implications of gharar (excessive uncertainty) prohibition. This dual competency ensures that technological solutions genuinely serve Islamic finance objectives rather than merely automating conventional practices with an Islamic veneer. Research institutions like INCEIF are pioneering educational programs that cultivate this double literacy, training a new generation of professionals who can navigate both domains with equal expertise.
Innovation Within Boundaries: The Research-Practice Loop
Perhaps most importantly, both frameworks prove that ethical constraints don’t stifle innovation — they guide it toward more sustainable outcomes. Research institutions are crucial in this process, providing the theoretical foundation for practical implementations that serve multiple stakeholders.
Think of sukuk (Islamic bonds) that use AI to optimize profit-sharing arrangements in real-time, or zakat calculation systems that automatically identify and distribute wealth to those most in need. These innovations emerge from the research-practice loop, where academic institutions develop frameworks that practitioners then implement and refine.
The convergence of Islamic finance and prosocial AI, supported by solid research institutions and hybrid intelligence models, offers a template for how financial systems can serve humanity’s highest aspirations, with respect to the planetary boundaries and future generations. This approach demonstrates that technology can embody moral principles that transcend cultural boundaries. But this vocation starts with human intention. We cannot expect the technology of tomorrow to be better than the humans of today. Garbage in, garbage out versus values in, values out. We have a choice but we must make it.
Practical Takeaways
For bankers: Start small but think systematically. Implement AI tools that enhance transparency and customer service while maintaining human oversight for complex decisions. Partner with research institutions to ensure your AI implementations are theoretically sound and practically viable. Consider how hybrid intelligence models can strengthen rather than replace human expertise.
For those with Islamic affinity: Embrace technology as a means of strengthening Islamic values through hybrid intelligence approaches. Demand AI systems that are explainable and aligned with Shariah principles. Support research institutions that are developing frameworks for ethical AI implementation. Remember that the goal isn’t technological adoption for its own sake, but leveraging innovation to better serve the ummah (community).
For researchers and educators: Focus on developing hybrid intelligence that combines the best of natural and artificial intelligence – and is open to all cultures and religious orientations.. Ensure that research remains connected to practical implementation through partnerships with financial institutions.
The future of finance lies not in choosing between tradition and innovation, but in wedding them purposefully through research-informed hybrid intelligence. Islamic finance and prosocial AI show us that the most powerful technologies are those guided by timeless human values — creating systems that don’t just work, but work for everyone.