The Porto Alegre Experiment

The Porto Alegre Experiment
Author: Marion Gret
Publisher: Zed Books
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781842774052

With its experiment in participative budget-making over the past decade, Porto Alegre has institutionalized the direct democratic involvement, locality by locality, of ordinary citizens in deciding spending priorities. This book examines how this democratic innovation works in practice and asks the difficult questions. Can local participation in public management really strengthen its efficiency? Is genuine participation possible without small groups monopolizing power? Can local organizations avoid becoming bureaucratized and cut off from their roots? Can neighborhood mobilization go beyond parochialism and act in the general interest?The book also raises the bigger question about what lessons can be learned from Porto Alegre to renew democratic institutions elsewhere in the world.

Cynical Citizenship

Cynical Citizenship
Author: Benjamin Junge
Publisher: University of New Mexico Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2018-07-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0826359450

This anthropological study of grassroots community leaders in Porto Alegre, Brazil’s leftist hotspot, focuses on gender, politics, and regionalism during the early 2000s, when the Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores) was in power. The author explores the ways community leaders make sense of official notions of citizenship and how gender, politics, and regional identities shape these interpretations. Junge further examines the implications of leaders’ deep ambivalence toward normative participation discourses for how we theorize and study participatory democracy, citizenship, and political subjectivity in Brazil and beyond.

Budgets and Ballots in Brazil

Budgets and Ballots in Brazil
Author: Aaron Schneider
Publisher:
Total Pages: 22
Release: 2002
Genre: Brazil
ISBN: 9781858644066

Budgeting institutions in the state of Rio Grande do Sul bring participatory democracy to public finance. A chief impact of participatory institutions is to change the relative power of groups within society. In this case, with the Workers' Party in state office, participatory decision-making strengthened lower-class groups interested in redistribution to the poor. Putting participatory budgeting (PB) in place was no easy task, however, as it required overcoming the difficulties of incorporating face-to-face decision-making at a scale unprecedented in terms of the number of people and the amount of money at stake. More significantly, implementing participatory budgeting sparked the political opposition of those who had benefited from more closed decision-making structures. Despite these obstacles, the PB has attracted hundreds of thousands of participants and has had a significant impact. Institutionally, PB opens avenues for participation to previously ignored segments of society and enhances government accountability. Politically, participatory budgeting shows signs of shifting the balance of power in the party system. And fiscally, the PB has promoted a redistributive development model while improving budgetary planning and efficiency. In short, the PB is the instrument and example of a lower-class political project that includes a participatory vision of democracy and a redistributive vision of development.

Barrio Democracy in Latin America

Barrio Democracy in Latin America
Author: Eduardo Canel
Publisher: Penn State Press
Total Pages: 262
Release: 2010-01-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0271037334

The transition to democracy underway in Latin America since the 1980s has recently witnessed a resurgence of interest in experimenting with new forms of local governance emphasizing more participation by ordinary citizens. The hope is both to foster the spread of democracy and to improve equity in the distribution of resources. While participatory budgeting has been a favorite topic of many scholars studying this new phenomenon, there are many other types of ongoing experiments. In Barrio Democracy in Latin America, Eduardo Canel focuses our attention on the innovative participatory programs launched by the leftist government in Montevideo, Uruguay, in the early 1990s. Based on his extensive ethnographic fieldwork, Canel examines how local activists in three low-income neighborhoods in that city dealt with the opportunities and challenges of implementing democratic practices and building better relationships with sympathetic city officials.

Brazil

Brazil
Author: Weltbank
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

This report is about effective participatory budgeting in Porto Alegre. The process was initiated during the early years of re-democratization and decentralization in Brazil, following the end of the military dictatorship in 1985. The 1988 constitution initiated a process of decentralization and tax reforms that created the fiscal space for municipalities to make more significant public investment decisions. A plethora of participatory governance institutions have since proliferated in Brazil, most importantly, municipal policy councils and participatory budgeting bodies. The Participatory Budget (OP) was formally introduced in Porto Alegre under the leadership of the Workers' Party in coalition with pro-democracy social movements. Although initially fraught with difficulties due to fiscal constraints, the OP in Porto Alegre became gradually more systematic over time. Today, the OP has a complex methodology for organizing participation in a city of over 1.4 million inhabitants, as well as for prioritizing public investments based on three main criteria: unmet basic needs, population, and citizen preferences. However, the OP constitutes one element in a broader complex system of participatory governance in Porto Alegre. Findings on the poverty and fiscal impacts of OP in Brazil suggest that OP is a participatory mechanism that has significant potential for pro-poor distributive impacts that lead to poverty reduction outcomes in the long run. Its ability to have a positive impact on fiscal performance is less evident.

Brazil - Toward a More Inclusive and Effective Participatory Budget in Porto Alegre

Brazil - Toward a More Inclusive and Effective Participatory Budget in Porto Alegre
Author: Weltbank
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

This report is about effective participatory budgeting in Porto Alegre. The process was initiated during the early years of re-democratization and decentralization in Brazil, following the end of the military dictatorship in 1985. The 1988 constitution initiated a process of decentralization and tax reforms that created the fiscal space for municipalities to make more significant public investment decisions. A plethora of participatory governance institutions have since proliferated in Brazil, most importantly, municipal policy councils and participatory budgeting bodies. The Participatory Budget (OP) was formally introduced in Porto Alegre under the leadership of the Workers' Party in coalition with pro-democracy social movements. Although initially fraught with difficulties due to fiscal constraints, the OP in Porto Alegre became gradually more systematic over time. Today, the OP has a complex methodology for organizing participation in a city of over 1.4 million inhabitants, as well as for prioritizing public investments based on three main criteria: unmet basic needs, population, and citizen preferences. However, the OP constitutes one element in a broader complex system of participatory governance in Porto Alegre. Findings on the poverty and fiscal impacts of OP in Brazil suggest that OP is a participatory mechanism that has significant potential for pro-poor distributive impacts that lead to poverty reduction outcomes in the long run. Its ability to have a positive impact on fiscal performance is less evident.

Face-to-Face Citizenship

Face-to-Face Citizenship
Author: Ana Paula Pimentel Walker
Publisher:
Total Pages: 263
Release: 2013
Genre: City planning
ISBN: 9781303194665

Brazilian cities are a laboratory for participatory democracy. The city of Porto Alegre, specially, is a symbol of grass-roots globalization because of Participatory Budgeting and the World Social Forum. Porto Alegre's Participatory Budgeting shifts the power to allocate part of the municipal's revenues from the City Council to public assemblies. More than three thousand municipalities worldwide experimented with Participatory Budgeting; this dissertation explores the long-term sustainability of this political institution in the city where it originated. How vulnerable are participatory institutions to partisan politics and market-forces? What are the circumstances under which the redistributive achievements of Participatory Budgeting become reversible? To answer these questions, I analyzed the past twenty years of Porto Alegre's expenditure budget to identify changes in the implementation of municipal services associated with changes in the political parties in power. With the same aim, I conducted archival research of previous Participatory Budgeting meeting minutes and verbatim transcriptions of deliberative meetings. I also collected narratives, oral histories, and surveys of Participatory Budgeting attendees. This dissertation is based on 18 months of participant observation of budgetary meetings and frequent fieldwork with grass-roots organizations that join in the process. Throughout this dissertation, I examine the transition of Porto Alegre's Participatory Budgeting from a mechanism of restraining some of the harshest manifestations of neoliberal urbanization to a model of urban development that privileges, largely, non-redistributive forms of urban planning. Each chapter addresses different but fundamental aspects of this transition and its outcomes in terms of redistributive justice, ideologies of participation and communicative practices, social values, personhood, and identity. Furthermore, I document the weakening of Participatory Budgeting, focusing on a new participatory project called the Local Solidarity Governance program. I analyze this transition from the point of view of those living in squatter settlements. I assess how effective Participatory Budgeting has been in housing the urban poor for its two decades of existence. Although political parties influence funding for housing, the design of Participatory Budgeting provides a bottom-up alternative to the either public housing or self-help policies of slum redevelopment by recognizing the diverse needs of people living in squatter settlements.

Is Participatory Democracy the Answer?

Is Participatory Democracy the Answer?
Author: Molly E. Hamilton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2014
Genre: Budget
ISBN: 9781321182880

This dissertation uses the case of Participatory Budgeting (PB) in Brazilian municipalities from 1989-2008 to evaluate the motivations for and effects of citizen participation in local budgetary decisions. Policies permitting citizen participation in local politics are being promoted around the world as a wholesale solution to a variety of problems, ranging from corruption, to voter apathy, to inequality. In the Brazilian case, the specific purposes of PB are improving public services and increasing citizen involvement in decision-making, and the policy is generally popular among citizens. In light of these dual demands, I argue that there are two potential theories derived from literature on voting, and democratic theory more broadly, that can explain the widespread popularity of participatory budgeting: (1) PB is popular because it provides instrumental material benefits, such as improved public services to citizens; and (2) PB is popular because it provides intrinsic benefits: the act of participating (or having the option to participate) is itself valuable to citizens. I begin by testing these competing theories of intrinsic and instrumental motivation for participation using subjective survey data from Porto Alegre--the flagship case of PB both in Brazil and around the world. I find that participants are fairly evenly divided between these two motivations, however the distribution is dependent on demographics: those with high socioeconomic status are much more likely to participate for intrinsic purposes than instrumental ones. In the second part of the dissertation, I use objective quantitative measures to systematically test the instrumental effects of Participatory Budgeting on spending patterns, public service provision, and human welfare in all 562 Brazilian municipalities over 50,000 residents, 25 percent of which implemented Participatory Budgeting at some point between 1992 and 2008. After correcting for endogeneity, I find that while PB does produce a change in spending patterns, it does not produce a corresponding change in service provision or welfare. Together, these findings suggest that while instrumental benefits may be lacking, PB should not be summarily dismissed as a result. It was adopted to address to two related demands from citizens : (1) improved public services, particularly for poor citizens; and (2) opportunities for citizens to be involved in municipal decision-making. It could be that success in one of these areas is sufficient to justify its popularity.