Save the Date: Charting the Road to NHI: What Psychologists Need to Know Now

Save the Date: Charting the Road to NHI: What Psychologists Need to Know Now

Save The Date: 3 February 2026

Charting the Road to NHI: What Psychologists Need to Know Now

As South Africa moves closer to the implementation of the National Health Insurance (NHI), it is essential for psychologists to understand the implications for practice, service delivery, and professional roles within the public health system.

The Psychology in Public Service (PiPS) Division of PsySSA invites members to an important engagement that will provide clarity on the current NHI landscape, anticipated developments, and what psychologists need to know and prepare for at this stage.

Date: Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Time: 17:00

Save the date and join this critical conversation as we collectively chart the road ahead. Details to follow soon – watch this space!

 

Board Exam Preparation Workshop – Save The Dates 2026

Board Exam Preparation Workshop – Save The Dates 2026

Board Exam Preparation Workshop – Save The Dates 2026

About this workshop

We’re excited to announce this year’s Board Exam Preparation Workshop series, designed to strengthen exam readiness for candidates across the psychology profession. Mark your calendars for our 2026 workshop dates:

15 January 2026 | 14 May 2026 | 10 September 2026

These sessions will offer a comprehensive, supportive, and engaging learning space for students and exam candidates in psychometry, counselling, research, educational, and – new this year – industrial psychology.

Through interactive and practice-oriented sessions, participants will unpack the structure of the board exam, explore core content domains, and strengthen the competencies required for success. The workshop also creates space for dialogue, clarity, and personalised guidance, helping each candidate cultivate the confidence needed to navigate the exam process with assurance.

We are proud to present this workshop as a collaborative initiative between our divisions:

  • The Division for Research and Methodology

  • The Society for Educational Psychology of South Africa

  • The Division of Registered Counsellors and Psychometrists

  • The South African Association of Counselling Psychology

This collective effort continues to affirm PsySSA’s commitment to advancing psychological science and practice in South Africa, upholding the highest standards of excellence, and empowering future professionals to contribute meaningfully to the well-being of our society.

More details will be shared soon – but for now, diarise the dates above to ensure you don’t miss out on this essential preparatory opportunity.

Trauma and Violence Division (TVD) – 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence

Trauma and Violence Division (TVD) – 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence

Digital violence is one of the fastest-growing forms of gender-based harm — from cyberstalking and doxxing to deepfakes, image-based abuse, hate speech, data theft, misinformation and online grooming. These acts leave deep psychological, social and economic consequences, and are part of a continuum that can escalate into offline violence, including femicide.

As part of the 2025 UNiTE campaign, the PsySSA Trauma and Violence Division highlights 16 key forms of digital violence and practical steps that individuals, communities, platforms and policymakers can take to keep women and girls safe online.

Across the next 16 days, we unpack the legal, technological and socio-educational actions needed to strengthen digital rights, hold perpetrators accountable, and build online spaces rooted in dignity, equality and justice.

Explore each day’s graphic and message below to learn how digital violence operates — and what we must do to end it.

Trauma and Violence Division (TVD) – 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence

Psychology in Public Service Division (PiPS) – 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence

As our lives, learning, work and relationships increasingly move online, technology-mediated violence has become one of the most urgent fronts in the fight against gender-based violence. From online harassment and stalking to image-based abuse and hate speech, digital violence threatens the safety, dignity and rights of women and girls in South Africa and across the world.

In this powerful contribution, PsySSA’s PiPS Division reflects on the 2025 UN Women theme — UNITE to End Digital Violence Against All Women and Girls — and explores how digital safety, gender equality and human rights are deeply interconnected. The piece highlights the need for stronger policy implementation, safer technology design, improved digital literacy, and coordinated, trauma-informed responses across sectors.

Read the full contribution below:

PsySSA Psychology in Public Service Division (PiPS)

16 Days Of Activism: UNITE to End digital Violence Against All Women and Girls

The 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence runs from 25th November to 10th December. It is a global call to action to prevent and eliminate all forms of violence against women and children. Although the campaign is observed for 16 days, its success rests on our daily and individual actions to safeguard our society against this cycle of abuse.

The 2025 global campaign, led by UN Women under its’ UNiTE initiative, is themed “UNITE to End Digital Violence Against All Women and Girls.” In the digital sphere, online harassment, abuse, stalking, non-consensual sharing of images or personal data, hate speech and other forms of technology-facilitated violence need to be eradicated in order to advance gender equality and human rights.

Technology must become a force for equality and not harm. The campaign calls on governments, private sector platforms, civil society and individuals to act to improve policies and laws; to design safer technologies; to equip women and girls with digital literacy and safety tools; to shift social norms and to hold perpetrators and platforms accountable.

In the South African and global context, the campaign reinforces that gender-based violence is never acceptable. By extending the reach of activism into the digital sphere, the 2025 campaign acknowledges the evolving ways in which violence and harassment manifest, especially as our lives, workplaces, learning, socialising and relationships move online. Gender-based violence does not occur in isolation. It is shaped by unequal power dynamics, harmful gender norms, historical and intergenerational trauma, socio-economic inequalities and attitudes that normalise violence.

Across its 16 days, the campaign provides an opportunity to create awareness, generate policy momentum, amplify survivors’ voices, share resources, shift culture, and foster solidarity. The campaign underscores women’s and girls’ digital safety as a fundamental part of their human rights, their freedom of expression, access to economic and social life and their dignity and bodily autonomy.

Every person has a role in ending GBVF. This collective vision can only be realised when every sector plays its part: Government must strengthen policy implementation, resource frontline services and ensure accountability across the justice and security systems and health services must provide trauma-informed and compassionate care. Intersectoral collaboration between social development, education, policing, health, civil society and community leaders is essential to creating a coordinated, survivor-centred response. When institutions work together and communities remain actively engaged, South Africa takes meaningful steps toward a society grounded in safety, dignity, healing and justice for all women and children.

Resources
https://www.unwomen.org/en/get-involved/16-days-of-activism
ChatGPT used for generative AI purposes & all Instagram squares were generated by ChatGPT

Trauma and Violence Division (TVD) – 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence

Sexuality and Gender Division – 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence

Digital spaces have become the new frontier of misogyny — a “wild west” where women, girls and gender-diverse people face cyberstalking, image-based abuse, deepfakes, hate speech, coercive control and algorithmically amplified harassment.

The PsySSA Sexuality and Gender Division reflects on how digital violence is part of a broader continuum of patriarchy, discrimination and gender-power dynamics. Drawing on global insights and African realities, this contribution examines how technology – far from neutral – can reinforce and accelerate inequality, while exposing already-marginalised groups to intensified harm.

The piece also outlines key actions we must take as psychologists, educators, policymakers and communities to address this evolving landscape of violence.

Read the full contribution to explore how digital violence is reshaping gendered harm — and what we must do to resist it.

PsySSA Sexuality and Gender Division

Digital violence against women and girls, a new frontier in the “wild west” of misogyny.

When Laura Bates launched the “Everyday Sexism” Project in 2012, she started a quiet revolution.

She brought to our attention the link between casual, everyday forms of gender-based harassment (often experienced by women and girls in the streets of daily life) and the more serious manifestations of sexual and gender-based violence and femicide. Ideologically, they have the same origins, deeply rooted in longstanding gender-power structures: patriarchal control, objectification of women, and misogynistic violence.

Since then we have seen the rise of digital violence against women and girls (and sexual and gender minorities), still part of the same continuum of power-inflected animosity towards anyone and anything that disrupted heterosexual male entitlement.

This has manifested in phenomena which disproportionately affect women and girls; cyberstalking; the non-consensual sharing of intimate images; hate speech and harassment online to spread misogynistic, or abusive messages; misinformation and disinformation to damage a woman’s reputation or discredit her; coercive control (using technology, such as tracking devices or smart home devices, to monitor and control a person’s behaviour); and deepfakes (using technology to manipulate images or videos to create false and harmful content).

We also know that minorities across Africa experience digital harms. Speaking at a recent Cybersecurity and Digital Rights round table, Mansah Amoah noted that LGBTQI+ youth, migrants and individuals from rural or low-income contexts face heightened exposure to targeted harassment, disinformation, surveillance and exclusion. This is enabled by anonymity and algorithmic amplification which intensify hate speech and harassment.

In her new book, The New Age of Sexism: How the AI Revolution is Reinventing Misogyny, Bates argues that not only does technology not automatically liberate or equalise, it has the potential to reinforce, accelerate and embed patriarchal structures and a range of inequalities in ways that are often less visible.

It does this through Artificial Intelligence (AI) which amplifies sexism and misogyny by reproducing and magnifying biased data and social norms in self-learning systems whose inner workings and long-term effects we cannot fully trace or predict.
Because these technologies are often designed, funded and controlled by a narrow demographic (generally men, white, global‐north), says Bates, they reflect their priorities and blind-spots. There is a potential “wild-west” effect: the pace of technology innovation outstrips regulation, ethical oversight, social norms and protections.

The end result is a poorly regulated online world where women and girls (and minorities) aren’t just passive beneficiaries of technology, they are active targets and subjects of new forms of abuse, harassment and exploitation, with devastating social and psychological consequences.

Fixing this is not going to be easy, in a sense the battle has almost been lost. But we can do some of the following:

  • Interrogate who designs, who profits, whose bodies are used and whose safety is assumed in relation to online technologies, platforms and tools.
  • Pay attention to structural and systemic change in technology: algorithmic oversight and virtual space regulation is more powerful than only holding individuals to account.
  • Lobby for better (or better implementation of) laws on digital harms.
  • Adopt an intersectional view. Gender’s intersection with race, class, disability and global geography matters: those already marginalised may bear the brunt of technological inequalities in the form of facial-recognition bias, deepfake targeting and surveillance.
  • Expand our frameworks of sexual violence and gender harm to include these technologically mediated forms.
  • Conduct further research and scholarship in the area of digital violence against women, children and gender diverse people, so as to inform policy.
  • And, engage early and explicitly in our work as therapists, thinkers, educators and policy makers.

 

Mr Pierre Brouard – Sexuality and Gender Division (Additional Member)