Boekhandel Douwes Den Haag

Participatory Budgeting in Global Perspective

McNulty, Stephanie (Associate Professor of Government, Associate Professor of Government, Franklin and Marshall College) & Touchton, Michael & Wampler, Brian (Professor of Political Science and Global Studies, Professor of Political Science and Global Studies, School of Public Service, Boise State University)

Participatory Budgeting in Global Perspective

Participatory Budgeting in Global Perspective

Participatory Budgeting in Global Perspective

 

This book provides a theoretical and empirical explanation to account for widespread variation in Participatory Budgeting's adoption, adaptation, and impacts.


Leverbaar

€ 99,40

Levertijd: 5 tot 10 werkdagen


Beschrijving Participatory Budgeting in Global Perspective

Participatory Budgeting continues to spread across the globe as government officials and citizens adopt this innovative democratic program in the hopes of strengthening accountability, civil society, and well-being. Governments often adapt PB's basic program design to meet local needs, thus creating wide variation in how PB programs function. Some programs retain features of radical democracy, others focus on community mobilization, and yet other programs seek to promote participatory development. Participatory Budgeting in Global Perspective provides a theoretical and empirical explanation to account for widespread variation in PB's adoption, adaptation, and impacts. This book develops six "PB types" to account for the wide variation in how PB programs function as well as the outcomes they produce. To illustrate the similar patterns across the globe, four empirical chapters present a rich set of case studies that illuminate the wide differences among these programs; chapters are organized regionally, with chapters on Latin America, Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Europe, and North America. By organizing the chapters regionally, it becomes clear that there are temporal, spatial, economic, and organizational factors that produce different programs across regions, but similar programs within each region. A key empirical finding is that the change in PB rules and design is now leading to significant differences in the outcomes these programs produce. We find that some programs successfully promote accountability, expand civil society, and improve well-being but, too often, researchers do not have any evidence tying PB to significant social or political change.


ISBN
9780192897756
Pagina's
256
Verschenen
NUR
754
Druk
1
Uitvoering
Hardback
Taal
Engels
Uitgever
OUP Oxford

Politicologie