
New Books in Political Science Celina Su, "Budget Justice: On Building Grassroots Politics and Solidarities" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Dec 17, 2025
Celina Su, the Inaugural Marilyn J. Gittell Chair in Urban Studies at CUNY and an expert on democratic governance, dives into her book, Budget Justice. She artfully argues that government budgets are moral documents that must involve grassroots input to truly serve the public. Su highlights the transformative potential of participatory budgeting via global examples from Porto Alegre and challenges its limited application in New York City. She also discusses innovative community projects and how poetry can serve as a tool for political exploration.
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Budgets Are Moral Documents
- Public budgets encode moral choices about who gets services and what inequalities are tolerated.
- Their opacity is a political problem because ordinary residents shouldn't need to be finance experts to understand those choices.
Right To The City Applied To Budgets
- The right to the city frames residents as creators of urban life who deserve inclusion and a voice in governance.
- A right-to-the-city budget means residents should both remain in the city and help shape how public funds are allocated.
Porto Alegre's Transformative PB
- Porto Alegre's participatory budgeting massively reallocated funds and improved services like schools and utilities.
- The city also saw higher tax compliance and lower infant mortality after PB built public trust in government.
