BinghamL.B., NabatchiT. & O'LearyR. (2005). The new governance: Practices and processes for stakeholder and citizen participation in the work of government.Public Administration Review, 65(5), 547–558.
CabannesY. & LipietzB. (2018). Revisiting the democratic promise of participatory budgeting in light of competing political, good governance, and technocratic logics.Environment & Urbanization, 30(1), 68–84.
4.
EbdonC. & FranklinA. L. (2006). Citizen participation in budget theory.Public Administration Review, 66(3), 437–447.
5.
GanuzaE. & BaiocchiG. (2012). The power of ambiguity: How participatory budgeting travels the globe.Journal of Public Deliberation, 8(2), 1–14.
McNultyS. (2012). An unlikely success: Peru's top-down participatory budgeting experience, Journal of Public Deliberation, 8(2), 1-19.
8.
MoynihanD. P. (2007). Citizen participation in budgeting: Prospects for developing countries. In ShahA. (eds.), Participatory budgeting (pp. 55–87). Washington, DC:The World Bank.
RobertsN. (1997). Public deliberation: An alternative to crafting policy and setting direction.Public Administration Review, 57(2), 124–132.
13.
ShahA. (2007). Participatory budgeting. Washington, DC:The World Bank.
14.
SimonsonB. & RobbinsM. D. (1999). The benefit equity principle and willingness to pay for city services.Public Budgeting and Finance, 19(2), 90–110.
15.
United Nations Development Programme and InterParliamentary Union. (2012). Global parliamentary report: The changing nature of parliamentary representation. Retrieved on May 2016 from http://www.ipu.org/pdf/publications/gpr2012-es-e.pdf