Popular Democracy: The Paradox of Participation

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Stanford University Press, 7 dic 2016 - 224 páginas

Local participation is the new democratic imperative. In the United States, three-fourths of all cities have developed opportunities for citizen involvement in strategic planning. The World Bank has invested $85 billion over the last decade to support community participation worldwide. But even as these opportunities have become more popular, many contend that they have also become less connected to actual centers of power and the jurisdictions where issues relevant to communities are decided.

With this book, Gianpaolo Baiocchi and Ernesto Ganuza consider the opportunities and challenges of democratic participation. Examining how one mechanism of participation has traveled the world—with its inception in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and spread to Europe and North America—they show how participatory instruments have become more focused on the formation of public opinion and are far less attentive to, or able to influence, actual reform. Though the current impact and benefit of participatory forms of government is far more ambiguous than its advocates would suggest, Popular Democracy concludes with suggestions of how participation could better achieve its political ideals.

 

Índice

One The Participation Age
1
Two The New Spirit of Government
20
Three The Global Spread of Participation
52
Córdoba Spain
78
Chicago Illinois
103
Six The Utopian Undercurrent of Participation
134
Notes
163
Bibliography
183
Index
205
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Sobre el autor (2016)

Gianpaolo Baiocchi is Associate Professor of Sociology at New York University and the author of Militants and Citizens: The Politics of Participatory Democracy in Porto Alegre (Stanford, 2005), among others. Ernesto Ganuza is a sociologist at the Spanish National Research Council.

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