Brazil is known for being one of the most unequal countries in the world. Since the 1990s many scholars, both in Brazil and those analyzing the country¹s trajectories from abroad, have been describing a decrease in country¹s inequalities. In this article we discuss the possible role of expanding citizen participation in policy making processes and overseeing their implementation in inequality reduction. To do so we explore the connections between the participatory mechanisms and the implementation of policies that are expected to reduce inequalities in two different participatory experiments that have taken place in Brazil: São Paulo municipal health councils and the country¹s participation in the Open Government Partnership (OGP). We argue...
In 1988, Brazil’s Constitution marked the formal establishment of a new democratic regime. In the en...
Brazil relies on the Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS), a public health-care system used by nearly 65 per...
Can participatory democracy only occur at the local level? What happens when participatory democracy...
Brazil is known for being one of the most unequal countries in the world. Since the 1990s many schol...
Today there are various views on how democracies can be advanced. Bringing participation into decisi...
Abstract: This article develops an analytical framework that can be utilized to demonstrate how and ...
How and where do participatory institutions contribute to the deepening of democracy? Substantial v...
As Brazil and other countries in Latin America turned away from their authoritarian past and began t...
Participatory experiments have been adopted throughout Latin America in an attempt to reinvent democ...
Brazil is a nation that has professed to be a `racial democracy\u27 such that race categories are no...
Brazil is a nation that has professed to be a `racial democracy\u27 such that race categories are no...
This work exposes the data referring to the GDP and the GDP per capita collected by the research “Te...
In Brazil, it is common to find citizens jammed together into municipal halls on neat, narrow rows o...
In this paper I argue that citizen involvement helped to promote a more equitable distribution of pu...
Today there are various views on how democracies can be advanced. Bringing participation into decisi...
In 1988, Brazil’s Constitution marked the formal establishment of a new democratic regime. In the en...
Brazil relies on the Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS), a public health-care system used by nearly 65 per...
Can participatory democracy only occur at the local level? What happens when participatory democracy...
Brazil is known for being one of the most unequal countries in the world. Since the 1990s many schol...
Today there are various views on how democracies can be advanced. Bringing participation into decisi...
Abstract: This article develops an analytical framework that can be utilized to demonstrate how and ...
How and where do participatory institutions contribute to the deepening of democracy? Substantial v...
As Brazil and other countries in Latin America turned away from their authoritarian past and began t...
Participatory experiments have been adopted throughout Latin America in an attempt to reinvent democ...
Brazil is a nation that has professed to be a `racial democracy\u27 such that race categories are no...
Brazil is a nation that has professed to be a `racial democracy\u27 such that race categories are no...
This work exposes the data referring to the GDP and the GDP per capita collected by the research “Te...
In Brazil, it is common to find citizens jammed together into municipal halls on neat, narrow rows o...
In this paper I argue that citizen involvement helped to promote a more equitable distribution of pu...
Today there are various views on how democracies can be advanced. Bringing participation into decisi...
In 1988, Brazil’s Constitution marked the formal establishment of a new democratic regime. In the en...
Brazil relies on the Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS), a public health-care system used by nearly 65 per...
Can participatory democracy only occur at the local level? What happens when participatory democracy...