The Biometric Imaginary: Bureaucratic Technopolitics in Post-Apartheid Welfare
The Biometric Imaginary: Bureaucratic Technopolitics in Post-Apartheid Welfare
Starting in March 2012, the South African government engaged in a massive effort of citizen registration that continued for more than a year. Nearly 19 million social welfare beneficiaries enrolled in a novel biometric identification scheme that uses fingerprints and voice recognition to authenticate social grant recipients. This article seeks to understand the meaning of biometric technology in post-apartheid South African welfare through a study of the bureaucratic and policy elite's motivation. It argues that biometric technology was conceived of and implemented as the most recent in a series of institutional, infrastructural and policy reforms that seek to deliver welfare in a standardised and objective manner. This has, at times, been driven by a false faith in technical efficacy and has involved a playing down of the differential political implications of biometric welfare identification.
CITATION: Donovan, Kevin P.. The Biometric Imaginary: Bureaucratic Technopolitics in Post-Apartheid Welfare . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2015. Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 41, No. 4, August 2015, pp. 815-833 - Available at: https://library.au.int/biometric-imaginary-bureaucratic-technopolitics-post-apartheid-welfare