Dr Carin Runciman
Job Title
Senior Lecturer

Room number
3.25Building (Address)
Chrystal Macmillan BuildingStreet (Address)
15a George SquareResearch interests
Research interests
Carin's research broadly focuses on Black working class popular politics and social movements in post-apartheid South Africa. Her research has interrogated the political and organisational dynamics of community protest and new forms of precarious worker organising. She is particularly interested in how these forms of activism help us to understand the experiences and quality of post-apartheid democracy with particular attention to the articulation of indigenous concepts of democracy and its praxis within community organisations.
In addition to this, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic she was a collaborator and Co-PI on the UJ/HSRC COVID-19 Democracy survey, a cross-sectional online survey conducted among adults living in South Africa in order to understand the social and economic impacts of the pandemic and the factors influencing vaccine hesitancy. The findings of this research were used to brief various South African government departments in developing their pandemic response policies and in addressing vaccine hesitancy.
I am interested in supervising PhD projects related to protest and social movements and the practice of citizenship and democracy.
Carin is an editorial board member of The Sociological Review, the Journal of Contemporary African Studies and the South African Review of Socioogy.
Background
Carin joined Social Policy in September 2022 from the University of Johannesburg, where she was Director for the Centre for Social Change and an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology.
Works within
Staff Hours and Guidance
Available by appointment
Publications by user content
Publication | Research Explorer link |
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Paret M, Runciman C. Voting decisions and racialized fluidity in South Africa’s metropolitan municipalities. African Affairs. 2023 Apr;122(487):269-298. Epub 2023 Apr 22. doi: 10.1093/afraf/adad010 |
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Runciman C, Hlungwani K. Organising against precarity: The life of a South African labour broker worker. Work, Employment And Society. 2022 Jun;36(3):557-568. Epub 2021 Aug 23. doi: 10.1177/09500170211015081 |
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Dor L, Runciman C. Precarious workers and the labour process: Problematising the core/non-core. Global Labour Journal. 2022 Jan 31;13(1):20-40. doi: 10.15173/glj.v13i1.4433 |
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Bekker M, Runciman C, Roberts B. Beyond the binary: Examining dynamic youth voter behaviour in South Africa. Politikon. 2022;49(4):297-317. Epub 2022 Dec 10. doi: 10.1080/02589346.2022.2151687 |
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Runciman C. Worker rights and the neoliberal state under Covid-19. South African Journal on Human Rights. 2021 Dec 13;37(2):255-276. doi: 10.1080/02587203.2021.2010592 |
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Runciman C. Gendered risks in survey research: Reflections from South African exit polls. International Journal of Social Research Methodology. 2020 Nov 1;23(6):743-747. Epub 2020 Feb 17. doi: 10.1080/13645579.2020.1729982 |
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Runciman C, Rule S, Bekker M, Roberts B, Orkin M, Davids YD et al. Providing Evidence and “Voice” During the COVID-19 Pandemic Using Online Rapid Response Surveys: Lessons from the UJ/HSRC COVID-19 Democracy Survey. South African Review of Sociology. 2020 Feb 25;51(3-4):188-208. doi: 10.1080/21528586.2022.2032315 |
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Englert T, Runciman C. Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa. Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies. 2020 Jan 8;101:84-104. |
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Brooks H, Ngwane T, Runciman C. Decolonising and re-theorising the meaning of democracy: A South African perspective. Sociological Review . 2020 Jan 1;68(1):17-32. Epub 2019 Sept 23. doi: 10.1177/0038026119878097 |
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Runciman C, Bekker M, Maggott T. Voting preferences of protesters and non-protesters in three South African Elections (2014–2019): Revisiting the ‘Ballot and the Brick’. Politikon: South African Journal of Political Studies. 2019 Oct 31;46(4):390-410. doi: 10.1080/02589346.2019.1682763 |
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Runciman C. Rolling back the right to strike: Amendments to South Africa’s Labour Relations Act and their implications for working-class struggle. Review of African Political Economy. 2019 Aug 22;46(160):347-356. doi: 10.1080/03056244.2019.1641478 |
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Runciman C. The "double-edged sword" of institutional power: COSATU, neo-liberalisation and the Right to Strike. Global Labour Journal. 2019 May 30;10(2):142-158. doi: 10.15173/glj.v10i2.3585 |
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Alexander P, Runciman C, Ngwane T, Moloto B, Mokgele K, Van Staden N. Frequency and turmoil: South Africa's community protests 2005-2017. South African Crime Quarterly. 2018 Mar 30;63:27-42. |
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Roberts BJ, Bohler-muller N, Struwig J, Gordon SL, Mchunu N, Mtyingizane S et al. Protest Blues: Public opinion on the policing of protest in South Africa. South African Crime Quarterly. 2017 Dec 13;62:63-80. doi: 10.17159/2413-3108/2017/v0n62a3040 |
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Runciman C. The ‘ballot and the brick’: protest, voting and non-voting in post-apartheid South Africa. Journal of Contemporary African Studies. 2016 Oct 1;34(4):419-436. doi: 10.1080/02589001.2017.1287347 |
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