The Progressive Post

Building the democracy of tomorrow in our cities

The participatory budget is 5% of the city’s investment budget

08/06/2018

While the percentage of the global population living in urban areas continues to rise and now exceeds 50%, the construction of sustainable, democratic cities represents one of the major challenges of the 21st century.
As places featuring lots of intermixing, innovation, cultural creation and dissemination as well as strong economic driving forces, cities simultaneously face the full force of the social and environmental crises of our time.
Deputy Mayor of Paris Pauline Véron tells us about her experience of the French capital’s participatory budget.

 

All over the world, elected officials and citizens are attempting to face these challenges by devising new democratic practices and new ways of using public space. In this spirit and firm in the belief that citizen participation in public policy contributes to making our cities fairer and more sustainable, we hoped to make Paris the social laboratory of tomorrow, using it to test several innovative forms of public participation. We believe that such measures are currently vital for at least two reasons. Firstly, they offer a response to the crisis of confidence afflicting representative democracies, as demonstrated by a 40% abstention rate in the latest municipal election in Paris, by restoring dialogue between politicians and the people. Secondly, they can be used as tools for promoting integration and social justice, aimed at disadvantaged populations who have been marginalised by the traditional machinations of government.

The participatory budget
We have therefore developed several physical and digital spaces which enable Parisians to learn about development projects, give their opinion, debate, submit ideas, develop their collective intelligence and vote for certain proposals. We believe that offering many means of participation ensures genuine involvement by the greatest possible number of people and helps a participatory culture spread to all fields of public life. Nevertheless, the participatory budget represents the spearhead of this democratic renewal as it enables residents to decide on how 5% of the city’s investment budget, or 100 million euro per year, is spent, by voting for projects put forward by citizens. As such, it is a device for promoting creativity, discussion and democracy, which gives citizens genuine decision-making power.

A model for the cities of tomorrow
The democratic impact of these measures is potentially huge, and we believe that it is a model that could be developed in the cities of tomorrow, in order that it is understood by all citizens and achieves its full potential. Four major transformations made possible by citizen participation are worth highlighting. Firstly, it represents an excellent tool for modernising and improving public policy. Underpinned by the expertise and desires of the people, land use planning genuinely fulfils its public purpose and adapts to the uses and concerns of those living in the city day in, day out. For example, the participatory budget has enabled us to go further in the creation of green spaces and pedestrianisation, and to establish a very ambitious cycling plan. It has also helped us to improve services for the homeless, such as secure lockers, wash kits and the renovation of numerous shelters.

These measures also generate social connections and genuine reflection on community life, through discussions, forums and project co-construction workshops, providing many spaces for debate and collective construction of political and social projects for our city. They also represent a powerful learning tool. First and foremost, they promote well-informed, active citizenship from an early age as children are able to vote on the participatory budget and even have their own budget for their schools. What is more, placing citizens in the shoes of the decision-makers enables us to educate them on how the city functions on the budgetary, administrative and technical level. Finally, these tools are truly transformative as they endeavour to seek out populations traditionally marginalised by political life, in order to genuinely redistribute resources, public services and power. Our measures allocate a third of the participatory budget to projects in working class neighbourhoods, making them a true force for social and spatial justice.

The implementation of these tools requires a genuine political desire to open up and share decision-making authority, a trust in the collective intelligence of the people as well as an adaptation and transformation of internal working methods. These efforts may be considerable but pay dividends through the immense potential unlocked by democratising the very fabric of the city, in terms of quality of life, community, social justice and citizen empowerment. This great potential should be at the heart of the progressive urban policy of tomorrow.

Find all related publications
Publications
18/04/2024

The transformation of the mainstream right and its impact on (social) democracy

15/04/2024

Expected labour market effects of the Green Deal Industrial Plan

The potential of labour policy for Just Transition regions
15/04/2024

Labour migration in the Western Balkans

Balkan Focus series
05/03/2024

A European feminist foreign policy?

The need for a progressive and transformative approach
Find all related news
News
19/04/2024

FEPS welcomes the signing of the La Hulpe Declaration

05/04/2024

FEPS supports the declaration of Portimão calling for affordable housing in the EU

Affordable housing needs Europe, Europe needs affordable housing
05/04/2024

FEPS stands with Zita Gurmai against persecution from Orban regime

02/04/2024

Interview with Maria João Rodrigues on the need for EU treaty changes with Euronews

Find all related in the media
In the media

Jetzt oder nie: Österreichs digitales Schicksal entscheidet sich (auch) im Klassenzimmer!

by Börse Express 14/04/2024
'Now or never: Austria's digital fate will (also) be decided in the classroom!' Börse Express's article mentions FEPS policy brief 'Europe needs high-tech talent'

EU-VÍZIÓ, Dull Szabolcs újságíró Andor Lászlóval beszélget

by MÚOSZ Magyar Újságírók Országos Szövetsége 11/04/2024
On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the EU great Eastern enlargement, FEPS Secretary General László Andor talks, in this video interview to the Hungarian Journalists' Association, the functioning of the Commission and its further development.

Sustainable democracies need a sustainable media sector, says Jourová

by EURACTIV 02/04/2024
FEPS President Maria João Rodrigues discusses AI and journalism at Stars4Media event

Does the European Union have the resources to match its ambitions?

by Euronews 02/04/2024
Maria João Rodrigues discusses reforming EU institutions. Available in ES, PT, & FR