Most states, to speak broadly are “younger” than the societies they they purport to administer. States therefore confront patterns of settlement, social relations, and production, not to mention a natural environment, that have evolved largely independent of state plans. The result is typically a diversity, complexity, and unrepeatability of social forms that are relatively opaque to the state, often purposely so.
James C. Scott, Seeing Like a State - How certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed.
∞06:41 pm, by rrrrohini∩3