The role of Blockchain in Achieving Criminal Justice from the Perspective of Islamic Jurisprudence and Human Rights

Document Type : Original Article

Authors
1 Department of Law, Faculty of Humanities Sciences, University of Gonabad, Gonabad, Iran.
2 Assistant Professor of International Law. Department of International Law Faculty of Law and Theology. Shahid Ashrafi Esfahani University, Isfahan, Iran.
10.22034/jhsrj.2025.2064628.1026
Abstract
Background and Aim: Despite significant advances in data technologies, special systems face challenges such as administrative corruption, evidence manipulation, violation of privacy, and overt discrimination. Challenges that hinder the full realization of criminal justice. This research aims to identify and limit the use of blockchain technology in addressing this problem, from the perspective of Islamic jurisprudence and human rights.
 
Materials and Methods: This research was conducted with a descriptive-analytical approach and was compiled from library sources.
 
Ethical Considerations: In writing the article, the originality of the texts, honesty, and trustworthiness were observed.
 
Findings: The findings show that commonalities such as emphasis on fair trial, preservation of human dignity, and prohibition of inhuman punishments provide a common platform for utilizing blockchain; while differences in concepts such as the right to be forgotten and limits on information disclosure necessitate the design of data architecture with access level control. Based on the analysis of priorities, recording and protecting digital evidence, secure authentication, and enforcement of sentences through smart contracts (with due regard to Sharia considerations) are the most efficient and least conflicting. In contrast, creating public criminal record databases requires strict restrictions and monitoring mechanisms.
 
Result: the use of private or hybrid blockchain networks, off-chain storage for sensitive data, the development of complementary laws in the field of electronic evidence and data protection, and the active participation of jurisprudential authorities and human rights institutions in the design and implementation process. Accordingly, the transition to blockchain-based criminal justice must be gradual, localized, and at the same time based on technical, legal, jurisprudential, and cultural considerations in order to both promote transparency and efficiency and prevent violations of individuals' fundamental rights.
Keywords

-    اسدپور، ف.، و همکاران. (1402). تأثیر تحولات حقوقی هوش مصنوعی در حوزه حقوقی مالکیت فکری. تحقیقات حقوق خصوصی و کیفری، (58)، 1-25.
-    ذاکری‌نیا، ح. (1402). ماهیت و مبنای مسئولیت مدنی ناشی از هوش مصنوعی در حقوق ایران و کشورهای اتحادیه اروپا. حقوق خصوصی، (42)، 1-20.
-    صادقی، م.، و همکاران. (1402). کاربرد بلاک‌چین در حفاظت از حقوق مالکیت فکری و ابعاد کاربردی آن. حقوق خصوصی، (42)، 45-68.
-    فدوی، ا. (1403). مالکیت آفریده‌های هوش مصنوعی؛ مروری بر چالش نوین حقوق مالکیت فکری در عصر فناوری. پژوهشنامه حقوق اسلامی، (66)، 75-100.
-    هاشمی، ح. (1403). کنترل یا نوآوری؛ الزامات حقوقی سیاست‌های تنظیمی در زمینه هوش مصنوعی. دولت و حقوق، 5(1)، 55-80.
-    طباطبایی، م. ح. (1417ق). المیزان فی تفسیر القرآن (ج 4). قم: جامعه مدرسین حوزه علمیه.
-    موسوی خمینی، ر. (1403ق). تحریر الوسیله (ج 2). قم: مؤسسه تنظیم و نشر آثار امام خمینی.
 
منابع انگلیسی
-        Blemus, S. (2018). Law and blockchain: A legal perspective on current regulatory trends worldwide. Revue Trimestrielle de Droit Financier (RTDF), (4), 1–33.
-        Crosby, M., Pattanayak, P., Verma, S., & Kalyanaraman, V. (2016). Blockchain technology: Beyond bitcoin. Applied Innovation Review, 2, 6–19.
-        European Commission. (2016). Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council (General Data Protection Regulation – GDPR). Official Journal of the European Union, L 119.
-        Li, X., Jiang, P., Chen, T., Luo, X., & Wen, Q. (2020). A survey on the security of blockchain systems. Future Generation Computer Systems, 102, 841–853.
-        Narayanan, A., Bonneau, J., Felten, E., Miller, A., & Goldfeder, S. (2016). Bitcoin and cryptocurrency technologies: A comprehensive introduction. Princeton University Press.
-         Tapscott, D., & Tapscott, A. (2017). Blockchain revolution: How the technology behind bitcoin is changing money, business, and the world. Penguin.
-        United Nations. (1966). International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Retrieved from https://www.ohchr.org
-        United Nations. (2013). United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime. Retrieved from https://www.unodc.org
-        Wright, A., & De Filippi, P. (2015). Decentralized blockchain technology and the rise of lex cryptographia. SSRN Electronic Journal. https:// doi.org/ 10.2139/ssrn.2580664
-        Yaga, D., Mell, P., Roby, N., & Scarfone, K. (2018). Blockchain technology overview. NIST Special Publication 800-Blockchain. National Institute of Standards and Technology.
-        Zyskind, G., Nathan, O., & Pentland, A. (2015). Decentralizing privacy: Using blockchain to protect personal data. In 2015 IEEE Security and Privacy Workshops (pp. 180–184). IEEE.