Walking a tightrope: social support in early adulthood in resource-constrained South Africa
Walking a tightrope: social support in early adulthood in resource-constrained South Africa
Supportive social relations are crucial to wellbeing as young adults transition to independence, especially when these transitions are impeded by limited employment and educational opportunities, leading to lengthy ‘waithoods’. Yet, there is limited empirical evidence on what young adults’ support networks look like in highly resource-constrained settings. We therefore analysed the core support networks of 929 16-29 year-old rural South Africans to explore their social support landscape, using descriptive statistics and multilevel regression models. We found that these youth have small but intense support networks, with contacts often providing multiple types of support on a daily basis. While kin and parents are important support sources when present, parents are also frequently missing from these networks. Women received more intense support than men with more kin ties; men’s networks contained more friends. While non-kin ties (friends and romantic partners) provide substantial support, they may also be unstable: for young men through dissolution following conflict and for young women due to the transactional nature of romantic relations. These findings imply that where work opportunities are scarce, young people’s support networks are smaller and less parentally focused than elsewhere, potentially increasing their fragility and raising the risk of isolation.
South Africa, family, friends, gender, personal networks, social support, waithood
2493-2515
Hoór, Dorottya
2c6ffea9-a181-4781-be8f-9177f5af3b85
Nxumalo, Vuyiswa
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Mcgrath, Nuala
b75c0232-24ec-443f-93a9-69e9e12dc961
Seeley, Janet
f3106c01-ac91-4ffc-945a-6db3558fd8eb
Shahmanesh, Maryam
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Harling, Guy
0403b83a-0afe-472c-a184-7a6357afe29a
September 2025
Hoór, Dorottya
2c6ffea9-a181-4781-be8f-9177f5af3b85
Nxumalo, Vuyiswa
35aed98c-d141-404b-99e3-952a8a6f4a0d
Mcgrath, Nuala
b75c0232-24ec-443f-93a9-69e9e12dc961
Seeley, Janet
f3106c01-ac91-4ffc-945a-6db3558fd8eb
Shahmanesh, Maryam
d88581c9-0ef2-4506-b8d3-d72682936a09
Harling, Guy
0403b83a-0afe-472c-a184-7a6357afe29a
Hoór, Dorottya, Nxumalo, Vuyiswa, Mcgrath, Nuala, Seeley, Janet, Shahmanesh, Maryam and Harling, Guy
(2025)
Walking a tightrope: social support in early adulthood in resource-constrained South Africa.
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 42 (9), , [02654075251337551].
(doi:10.1177/02654075251337551).
Abstract
Supportive social relations are crucial to wellbeing as young adults transition to independence, especially when these transitions are impeded by limited employment and educational opportunities, leading to lengthy ‘waithoods’. Yet, there is limited empirical evidence on what young adults’ support networks look like in highly resource-constrained settings. We therefore analysed the core support networks of 929 16-29 year-old rural South Africans to explore their social support landscape, using descriptive statistics and multilevel regression models. We found that these youth have small but intense support networks, with contacts often providing multiple types of support on a daily basis. While kin and parents are important support sources when present, parents are also frequently missing from these networks. Women received more intense support than men with more kin ties; men’s networks contained more friends. While non-kin ties (friends and romantic partners) provide substantial support, they may also be unstable: for young men through dissolution following conflict and for young women due to the transactional nature of romantic relations. These findings imply that where work opportunities are scarce, young people’s support networks are smaller and less parentally focused than elsewhere, potentially increasing their fragility and raising the risk of isolation.
Text
hoor-et-al-2025-walking-a-tightrope-social-support-in-early-adulthood-in-resource-constrained-south-africa
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 April 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 May 2025
Published date: September 2025
Keywords:
South Africa, family, friends, gender, personal networks, social support, waithood
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 502900
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502900
ISSN: 0265-4075
PURE UUID: 4e0bfd8c-552c-42ab-89ed-01b346983797
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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2025 16:38
Last modified: 11 Sep 2025 02:39
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Contributors
Author:
Dorottya Hoór
Author:
Vuyiswa Nxumalo
Author:
Janet Seeley
Author:
Maryam Shahmanesh
Author:
Guy Harling
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