Jurnal Ilmiah Mizani: Wacana Hukum, Ekonomi Dan Keagamaan
Vol 13, No 1 (2026): January-June

ESG Integration in Sharia Investment: A Maqāṣid Al-Sharī'ah Perspective on Sharia Mutual Fund Portfolios in Indonesia

Sholikul Hadi (Institut Agama Islam Nasional Laa Roiba Bogor, Indonesia)
Ade Sofyan Mulazid (Universitas Islam Negeri Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta)
Yudi Permana (Institut Agama Islam Nasional Laa Roiba Bogor, Indonesia)
Abdul Hakim (Universitas Koperasi Indonesia Bandung, Indonesia)
Dewi Kurniasari (Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung, Indonesia)
Meirani Rahayu Rukmanda (Institut Miftahul Huda Subang, Indonesia)
Rio Kartika Supriyatna (Institut Agama Islam Nasional Laa Roiba Bogor, Indonesia)



Article Info

Publish Date
08 May 2026

Abstract

: Despite the rapid growth of sustainable finance, the Islamic jurisprudential status of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) integration in Sharia-compliant mutual funds remains unresolved. Existing scholarship treats ESG–Sharia compatibility as a matter of thematic alignment rather than legal obligation, leaving fund managers and regulators without a normative framework grounded in Islamic legal reasoning. This study addresses that gap by determining the ḥukm taklīfī governing ESG integration in Indonesian Sharia mutual funds. A mixed-methods design is embedded within an uṣūl al-fiqh analytical framework. Quantitatively, Pearson correlation and simple linear regression are applied to ten Sharia mutual funds listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange (2019–2024); qualitatively, in-depth interviews with fund managers, Sharia supervisory board members, and capital market regulators are supplemented by a questionnaire administered to 210 retail investors. Empirical findings serve as the maṇāṭ (operative cause) for a three-stage istinbāṭ sequence: taḥqīq al-maṇāṭ, takyīf al-waqāʾīʿ, and takhrīj al-ḥukm. ESG-integrated Sharia funds generate superior risk-adjusted performance (annualised returns of 8.5–9.7%, Sharpe ratios > 1.10) relative to non-ESG Sharia funds (7.0–7.5%; Sharpe ratio ≈ 0.90), confirming ESG integration as consistent with ḥifẓ al-māl. Subjecting these findings to maqāṣid al-sharīʿah analysis — incorporating Ibn ʿĀshūrʿs articulation of ḥifẓ al-bīʿah alongside the maxims lā ḍarar wa lā ḍirār and darʼ al-mafāsid muqaddam ʿalā jalb al-maṣāliḥ — the study derives a graduated ruling: ESG integration is mandūb as a baseline and attains wājib kifāʼī where conventional Sharia screening demonstrably fails to prevent verifiable environmental or social darar. The governance pillar is already operationally embedded within existing Sharia oversight structures; social screening remains partial and requires extension from exclusionary toward positive maqāṣid-oriented assessment; and environmental integration generates a collective institutional obligation to develop the requisite data infrastructure. The study makes an original contribution to Islamic investment jurisprudence (fiqh al-istithmār) as the first to apply a complete uṣūl al-fiqh derivation to ESG integration in Sharia mutual funds, advancing a juristic proposal for a national Sharia-ESG fatwa framework to be coordinated by DSN-MUI and OJK.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

mizani

Publisher

Subject

Description

Focus and Scope FOCUS This journal aims to disseminate scholarly works related to research and discussions in the field of Contextualized Islamic Law, contributing to an enhanced understanding of Islamic law. Through the publication of articles and research reports, it seeks to advance knowledge and ...