Health advice that South African parents need—and how tech can help
In short Parents act on advice that is delivered with respect and fits their child, values and routines. Drawing on workshops that took place in South Africa and Portugal, a new research paper turns insights on how parents receive health advice into practical design rules for message-based tools that could close maternal and child health… View Article

Read more

HSRC joins Deputy Minister Dr Nomalungelo Gina in Back-to-School campaign in KwaZulu-Natal

Read more

HSRC and SAMRC reinforce strategic partnership

Read more

HSRC NEWS

HSRC CURRENT PROJECTS

Social Science that makes a difference

With a service record of more than 50 years, the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) is the largest dedicated research institute in Africa focusing on the social sciences and humanities.

What we do

Our Divisions & Units

Our work finds expression through the following divisions and units:

Division
Protected: AISA, BRICS, and the Global South (ABGS)

Read more

Division
Research, Development, Science, and Innovation (RDSI)

Read more

Division
Research Impact Division (RID)

Read more

Division
Developmental, Capable and Ethical State (DCES)

Read more

Division
Public Health, Societies and Belonging (PHSB)

Read more

Division
Equitable Education and Economies (EEE)

Read more

Division
Centre for Science in Society (CSIS)

Read more

Division
Centre for Science, Technology and Innovation Indicators (CeSTII)

Read more

PRESS RELEASES

Events

Research Data

The HSRC Research Data Service provides a digital repository of the HSRC's research data in support of evidence-based human and social development.

View Research Data

HSRC Repository

The HSRC Institutional Repository is an important tool that the HSRC utilises to preserve and disseminate its documents. Different types of publications including scholarly research outputs are collected, preserved and distributed in a digital format.

View HSRC Repository

Our Impact

Research funders are increasingly asking about real measurable benefits – which requires impact assessments of the interventions, programmes, projects and policies that emerge from funded research. There is thus increasing demand for monitoring, measurement, analysis, and reporting on impact.