The Covid-19 Social Relief of Distress Grant in South Africa: Exploring the urban vs rural implications of a datafied social protection cash-transfer programme

Abstract ID: 3.12562
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Megannon, V. (1)
(1) University of Cape, 17 Queen Street, 7700 Cape Town, ZA
(2) University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, Cape Town, 7700
How to cite: Megannon, V.: The Covid-19 Social Relief of Distress Grant in South Africa: Exploring the urban vs rural implications of a datafied social protection cash-transfer programme, International Mountain Conference 2025, Innsbruck, Sep 14 - 18 2025, #IMC25-3.12562, 2025.
Categories: Equality, Gender, Sustainable Development
Keywords: Cash Transfer, Unemployed, Digitisation, South Africa
Categories: Equality, Gender, Sustainable Development
Keywords: Cash Transfer, Unemployed, Digitisation, South Africa
Abstract

Drawing on the implementation of The Covid-19 Social Relief of Distress Grant, South Africa’s first online and automated cash-transfer, and first cash-transfer to benefit able-bodied, working aged and unemployed people, this paper makes two contributions. First, it explores the significance of datafied social protection cash transfers in the everyday lives of potential beneficiaries in an urban site and a rural site. Second, it evaluates the suitability of Heeks and Shekhar’s (2019) systematic and comprehensive data justice framework for datafied social protection cash-transfer programmes from the perspective of beneficiaries. This paper is based on qualitative longitudinal fieldwork with 41 participants during and after the Covid-19 pandemic in urban and rural areas of South Africa. Findings show that given the significance of contextual barriers, families and households living in poverty played an important role in supporting cash transfer beneficiaries, when overcoming data related barriers, to secure their benefit by investing limited shared resources. In the context of a datafied social protection cash-transfer programme in the Global South, families and households are significant mediating factors of structural determinants that affect the outcome of beneficiary entitlements.