It Takes A City

Stefánia Kapronczay and Flavio Proietti Pantosti

It Takes a City is a podcast about participation and democracy. We believe that greater participation is key to making democracy work and to making people feel better about it. Through conversations with practitioners, we explore stories from communities with limited resources, where people are trying to reach beyond the usual voices, tackle difficult challenges, and sometimes fail along the way. We are Stefania Kapronczay and Flavio Proietti Pantosti, find us at https://takesacity.com/.

Episodes

  1. 8. A Scalable Recipe: Bringing What Works To Different Cities

    7H AGO

    8. A Scalable Recipe: Bringing What Works To Different Cities

    Episode 8 takes us to Mexico.  We look at what it really takes to make participatory programs work in practice, and ask whether their success is less about design and more about discipline. Dino Cantú-Pedraza, Founder and Director of Aceleradora de Ciudades, shares her experience from working inside a municipality and now supporting local governments to implement participatory programs. She talks about the realities inside government, about the tools, and which ones work best for which goals. But in her experience, discipline matters more. The program does not stop at design. It depends on how teams are organized, whether they get the needed support from political leadership, on champions who are not always the ones with the biggest titles, and on making sure the work is sustainable for public servants. She shares a story when they received so many participatory budgeting proposals that meeting their own deadlines became nearly impossible. — We’re living through a global democratic crisis, and elections around the world are sending a clear message: the system isn’t working. It Takes a City is a podcast about participation and democracy, hosted by Stefania Kapronczay, a human rights advocate working on resilient democracies from Budapest, Hungary, and Flavio Proietti Pantosti, a social innovator and entrepreneur focused on public administration from Rome, Italy. Through conversations with practitioners, we explore lesser-known stories of participation, often from communities with limited resources. Each episode unpacks real tactics, strategic dilemmas, and honest failures, with the goal of offering practical insights. Visit https://takesacity.com/ or get in touch at ⁠⁠ittakesacity@gmail.com⁠⁠.

    26 min
  2. 7. Participatory Budgeting: From Experiment To Institution

    APR 28

    7. Participatory Budgeting: From Experiment To Institution

    Episode 7 takes us to Lisbon, Portugal. We look at what is probably the best-known participatory tool, participatory budgeting, and discuss how it helped transform Lisbon from a city in crisis into one that attracts people. For instance, the idea of co-working spaces came through participatory budgeting and proved to be key for Lisbon becoming a hub for digital nomads.  Graça Fonseca, former Minister of Culture of Portugal and former Deputy Mayor of the City of Lisbon, shares how participatory budgeting helped transform the city. The program did not stop with voting on projects, it continued through shared problem-solving, through implementation, and through building a sense of collective ownership between citizens and public servants. This episode is about what happens when participation becomes a continuous process, not a one-off decision. --- We’re living through a global democratic crisis, and elections around the world are sending a clear message: the system isn’t working. It Takes a City is a podcast about participation and democracy, hosted by Stefania Kapronczay, a human rights advocate working on resilient democracies from Budapest, Hungary, and Flavio Proietti Pantosti, a social innovator and entrepreneur focused on public administration from Rome, Italy. Through conversations with practitioners, we explore lesser-known stories of participation, often from communities with limited resources. Each episode unpacks real tactics, strategic dilemmas, and honest failures, with the goal of offering practical insights. Visit https://takesacity.com/ or get in touch at ⁠⁠ittakesacity@gmail.com⁠⁠.

    27 min
  3. 6. Social Audits: What Happens When Citizens Audit Government Spending

    APR 21

    6. Social Audits: What Happens When Citizens Audit Government Spending

    Episode Six takes us to Delhi, India.  In 2001, in the low-income neighbourhoods of east Delhi, residents used India's new Right to Information Act to audit the Public Distribution System — the government programme meant to deliver subsidised food to the poor. The method, the jan sunwai or public hearing, brought citizens, officials, and an independent panel into the same room to compare what the state claimed it had done with what people had actually received. Sowmya Kidambi and Suchi Pande take us through the long arc of that practice: from grassroots campaigning in Delhi, to the first government-backed social audit unit in Andhra Pradesh, to the sixteen pieces of Indian legislation where social audits are now mandatory. They also tell us what the law alone cannot do — and why the room itself, with low-income residents and officials reading the same page, remains the radical part. — We’re living through a global democratic crisis, and elections around the world are sending a clear message: the system isn’t working. It Takes a City is a podcast about participation and democracy, hosted by Stefania Kapronczay, a human rights advocate working on resilient democracies from Budapest, Hungary, and Flavio Proietti Pantosti, a social innovator and entrepreneur focused on public administration from Rome, Italy. Through conversations with practitioners, we explore lesser-known stories of participation, often from communities with limited resources. Each episode unpacks real tactics, strategic dilemmas, and honest failures, with the goal of offering practical insights. Visit https://takesacity.com/ or get in touch at ⁠⁠ittakesacity@gmail.com⁠⁠.

    29 min
  4. 3. What Children Know About Cities: Intergenerational Participation

    MAR 31

    3. What Children Know About Cities: Intergenerational Participation

    Episode Three takes us to Surakarta, Indonesia. In conversation with Nina Asterina and Bima Pratama Putra from the Kota Kita Foundation, we explore what it means to take inclusion seriously. On a single busy street, where children walk past a school, a prison, shops, and constant traffic, they were asked what they needed. One of the first answers was a swimming pool. Instead of dismissing it, the team explored what it really meant, and realized that what was missing was simpler and more possible: trees and green space. By taking their voices seriously, the project shows how inclusion can improve life for everyone who uses the street, including adults, people with disabilities, and even shop owners.  --- We’re living through a global democratic crisis, and elections around the world are sending a clear message: the system isn’t working. It Takes a City is a podcast about participation and democracy, hosted by Stefania Kapronczay, a human rights advocate working on resilient democracies from Budapest, Hungary, and Flavio Proietti Pantosti, a social innovator and entrepreneur focused on public administration from Rome, Italy. Through conversations with practitioners, we explore lesser-known stories of participation, often from communities with limited resources. Each episode unpacks real tactics, strategic dilemmas, and honest failures, with the goal of offering practical insights. Visit https://takesacity.com/ or get in touch at ⁠ittakesacity@gmail.com⁠.

    28 min
  5. TRAILER

    It Takes A City - Trailer

    We’re living through a global democratic crisis, and if we’re honest, we don’t really know how to fix it. Elections around the world are sending a clear message: the system isn’t working. It Takes a City is a podcast about participation and democracy. We believe that greater participation is key to making democracy work and to making people feel better about it. Through conversations with practitioners, we explore stories from communities with limited resources, where people are trying to reach beyond the usual voices, tackle difficult challenges, and sometimes fail along the way. We are Stefania Kapronczay, an advocate for human rights and resilient democracies from Budapest, Hungary, and Flavio Proietti Pantosti, a social innovator and entrepreneur working on public administration and government issues from Rome, Italy. Each episode focuses on lesser-known experiences of participation, especially in places where resources are scarce. We unpack real tactics, strategic dilemmas, and honest failures, with the goal of offering practical guidance you can use, whether you’re a local government official, an activist, or a policy student. Special thanks to Amplitudo, especially Fabio di Santo, Daniele Prina, and Marco Romano, for their fantastic editing work. They genuinely care about participation and were an absolute pleasure to collaborate with. Learn more about their work at amplitudo.it. For more about us, visit https://takesacity.com/

    1 min

Trailer

About

It Takes a City is a podcast about participation and democracy. We believe that greater participation is key to making democracy work and to making people feel better about it. Through conversations with practitioners, we explore stories from communities with limited resources, where people are trying to reach beyond the usual voices, tackle difficult challenges, and sometimes fail along the way. We are Stefania Kapronczay and Flavio Proietti Pantosti, find us at https://takesacity.com/.