Urban participatory budget plan
Introduction
citizen participation is the intervention of citizens in decision-making regarding the management of resources and actions that have an impact on the development of their communities. It is a legitimate right of citizens and to facilitate it, a legal framework and democratic mechanisms are required that provide the conditions for people and organizations from various sectors of society to make their voices and proposals reach all levels of government.
The term social or citizen participation can be conceptualist from different theoretical perspectives, thus it can refer to the ways of founding the legitimacy and consensus of a certain population, for example: democratic participation can also refer to the ways of fighting against the conditions of social inequality and to overcome the conditions of social inequality it is necessary to promote participation.[1] In most definitions of citizen participation, there are elements in common: a mediation between society and government so that the different social subjects intervene, based on their diverse interests and values, which influence policies. public bodies and government structures, based on the claim of the right to intervene in the matters that concern them.[2].
The State, by assuming the problems and interests of society, has the task of generating effective development policies in different areas, considering the right of citizens to enhance their control and responsibility capacities, since the development of a democratic nation will be achieved only with the active participation of all sectors of society. This is where the "values of citizen participation" come in, which are classified into 3 Parts: responsibility, solidarity, tolerance.
A well-informed citizenry about the community's problems will be able to actively participate in achieving present and future well-being, whether by collaborating with simple actions or by getting involved and exercising their rights in favor of solving problems, putting into practice the values of citizen participation, since a responsible, supportive and tolerant society is a just society in every sense. For example, some sectors of society are the following: women, children and young people, farmers, indigenous peoples, workers and unions, NGOs, merchants and industrialists, universities and professionals.
Citizen participation is continually followed by its opposite side, which is abstentionism. Discouragement and distrust can be generalized among the population due to the lack of institutional contact with society, that is, due to the lack of direct social institutional contact. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights in its article 21 indicates that everyone has the right to participate in the government of their country, directly or through freely chosen representatives. And in its article 29 it indicates that every person has duties towards the community, since only in it can they freely and fully develop their personality. These articles clearly show that participation and development are rights and duties that drive the personality of each inhabitant of this country.