posttas
Posttas is a term used primarily in speculative fiction and theoretical discourse to describe a post-TAS regime—a set of social, technical, and cultural arrangements that emerge after the collapse, transformation, or obsolescence of a central Transnational Administrative System (TAS). The TAS concept refers to a global or supra-national governance framework that coordinates policy, infrastructure, and resource distribution. Posttas envisions decentralized, networked systems that operate without a single controlling authority, coordinated through interoperable protocols, trust networks, and common norms.
Origin and usage: The term arose in discussions about post-institutional futures and has appeared in multiple
Characteristics: Major features include distributed governance with local autonomy, digital sovereignty, open-source infrastructure, resilience through redundancy,
Impact and criticisms: Proponents argue posttas offers adaptable, resilient alternatives to centralized states. Critics warn that
See also: post-state, postcapitalism, distributed governance, resilience theory, speculative fiction.
Note: Posttas is not an established term in real-world policy; definitions vary by author and work.