Department of Sociology2024-11-0920210952-189510.1111/gove.124642-s2.0-85089004732https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/723Since the 1990s, South Africa, like many other countries from the Global South, has provided extensive social assistance for the poor. The literature on these policies, however, is largely dominated by structuralist accounts, and it largely overlooks political factors. We conducted quantitative analyses regarding the South African flagship Child Support Grant (CSG) program and investigated how contentious and electoral political dynamics jointly shape the provision of this program. Based on a logistic regression analysis, we measured the effect of protest participation, voting preference, and their interaction on the likelihood of CSG receipt. Our analysis showed that CSG receipt is much higher among "uncontentious supporters" of ANC and "contentious nonsupporters," as well as those who join violent protests. This lends support for our argument that CSG is being used as a tool for electoral politics and containment of unrest, providing fresh evidence for political mediation theories of social policy.pdfPolitical sciencePublic administrationGovernment and lawThe politics of social assistance in South Africa: how protests and electoral politics shape the Child Support GrantJournal Article1468-0491https://doi.org/10.1111/gove.12464555445800001Q2NOIR03135