h.d.mabuse on 2 Apr 2001 22:48:29 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Participatory budgeting... an alternative to wickedneoliberalism |
>Cities For People > >http://www.redpepper.org.uk/intarch/xcities.html > >Daniel Chavez describes how two experiments in participatory democracy have >transformed the political culture in Brazil and Uruguay > > The participatory politics of the PT, Partido dos Trabalhadores (Workers' > Party) in Brazil and the FA, Frente Amplio (Broad Front) in Uruguay has > transformed the corrupt, wasteful municipal government of South > America. These experiments in determining local budgets through > extensive citizen involvement and in decentralising the administration of > services provide a laboratory from which the left can learn how to > govern in a new way. > > Decentralisation and participatory budgeting challenge neoliberalism. > They increase the accountability of local government and introduce > decision making and negotiation from below in place of the traditional > centralised and secretive process. This model seeks to transform > powerless urban residents who, after decades of authoritarianism were > used only to casting an obligatory vote every five years, into active > subjects with growing power over the decisions that affect their daily > lives. > > In the cities of Montevideo and Porto Alegre, left parties have > reorganised the local state to play a co-ordinating and faciliating role in > the process. Such progressive local governments face a double > challenge. They must be effective and efficient in providing basic urban > services and administering financial resources; they also have the goal > of overthrowing repressive decision making systems. > > Participatory budgeting and decentralisation to sub-municipal districts > are underway in some 80 cities of Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina where > progressive parties hold office. Guided by the values of the PT and the > FA, they are not mere imitations of what has been done in Montevideo > and Porto Alegre but are a response to the political realities of each > location. > > Montevideo and Porto Alegre have similar economies and social > structures, and both are closer to European cities than those of Latin > America. Before the collapse of the Brazilian currency last January, the > per capita income in the two cities was above US$6,000. Both cities > have high literacy rates. > > >unquote< _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold