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School of Diplomacy and International Relations

Diplomacy Professor Publishes Book on Participatory Budgeting in Brazil  

Benjamin GoldfrankDiplomacy Professor Benjamin Goldfrank published a book titled, The Rise, Spread, and Decline of Brazil's Participatory Budgeting; the Arc of a Democratic Innovation. Written with Professor Brian Wampler of Boise State University and published by Palgrave Macmillan, the book is a study of participatory budgeting. The book is timely given that this year's presidential election will feature former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, simply known as Lula, who is likely to prevail. His party, the Partido dos Trabalhadores, or PT, developed participatory budgeting and relied on it in part to build its popularity during the 1990s up to his victory in the 2002 election. The book offers policy makers in Brazil insight into participatory budgeting’s decline there and the consequences for democracy in Brazil.

Participatory budgeting is a type of political tool in which regular citizens are given a role in deciding budgetary measures in their communities. The concept gained fame in the Brazilian city of Porto Alegre, spreading to Montevideo, Uruguay, and Caracas, Venezuela, and can now be found worldwide, including in Madrid, Paris, and several districts of Chicago and New York. The book provides an insightful, quantitative, overview of its history in Brazil and three specific periods, its inception in the late 1980s, growth in the 1990s, and fall from popularity post-2004.

Goldfrank met coauthor, Brian Wampler, in 1999 while conducting doctoral dissertation research in Porto Alegre, Brazil. The research for the book is based on datasets Professors Goldfrank and Wampler compiled. Professor Goldfrank originally intended to travel to Brazil in May of 2020 to research the book, partially funded by a Seton Hall Research Council Grant, but the COVID-19 pandemic made travel impossible. Instead, Goldfrank conducted several virtual interviews with figures involved in participatory budgeting for his research.

Professor Goldfrank's interest in Latin America started in his junior high school Spanish classes, continuing into his undergraduate years during which he did research in Chile on the Chilean Communist Party, and into his years as a graduate student at UC Berkeley. He has published many articles not only in English, but in Spanish and Portuguese.

Learn more about Dr. Goldfrank 
Learn more about The Rise, Spread, and Decline of Brazil’s Participatory Budgeting 

Categories: Nation and World

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