Document Type : Special

Author

Master of Science in Social Communication, Radio and Television University, Faculty of Religion and Media, Qom, Iran

Abstract

Social harms are very important as things that disrupt the public order of society and violate its norms. Because the increase in anomalies is a sign of crisis and threatens social order. It can affect the quality of individual and social life of individuals, so many thinkers in various fields of religion, social, psychological, judicial and ... This issue has been studied because social harms can endanger the health of society and the religion of Islam pays special attention to the issue of society. The researcher in the present study seeks to design a model of social harm from the perspective of Islam. This research is a qualitative method that first examines and analyzes the sources related to social harms from the Islamic point of view from the meta-synthesis method and then has been implemented using interpretive structural modeling technique. This method is one of the methods of systems analysis that examines the interactions between system elements. MICMAC method has been used to cluster the dimensions of social harms. Findings showed that among the dimensions of social harms and then judicial harms have the most influence and life injuries have the most dependence

Keywords

  • Muduli, K., Govindan, K., Barve, A., Kannan, D. and Geng, Y. (2013). Role of behavioural factorsin green supply chain management implementation in Indian mining industries. Resources, Conservation and Recycling, 76(0): 50-60
  • Ravi, V. and Shankar, R. (2005). Analysis of interactions among the barriers of reverse logistics, Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 72(8): 1011-1029.
  • Wang, G., Wang, Y. and Zhao, T. (2008). Analysis of interactions among the barriers to energy saving in China, Energy Policy, 36(6): 1879-
  • Warfield, J.W. (1974). Developing interconnected matrices in structural modelling, IEEE transcript on systems, Men and Cybernetics, 4(1): 51-81.
  • Watson, R. (1978).Interpretive structural modeling—A useful tool for technology, Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 11(2): 165-185.