This article develops a structural account of why organized orders remain stable, become brittle, or drift when recognition weakens and consent becomes progressively harder to reproduce. Its central claim is that organizational stability cannot be reduced to coercive capacity, formal procedure, short-run performance, or visible continuity. Durable order also depends on whether those subject to an organization can still encounter it as intelligible, consequential, and sufficiently valid in relation to their own place within it. Recognition is defined here not as esteem, sentiment, symbolic visibility, or the mere feeling of being heard. It refers to whether subjects, members, participants, or constituencies remain structurally legible as consequence-bearing within the order. Consent viability refers not to satisfaction or unanimous approval, but to the continued reproducibility of acceptance, compliance, participation, or attachment without primary dependence on continuous coercion. From these distinctions, the article develops a theorem-driven account of recognition-based organizational stability. Its principal result is the Recognition–Consent Stability Theorem. Within the stated scope, the theorem holds that where an organized order must persist over time while recognition loses consequence-legibility and consent is treated as already secured, the order will tend to preserve continuity through substitute stabilizers rather than through restored recognition. These substitutes may include procedural expansion, symbolic inclusion, managerial activity, performance display, communication, metrics, charisma, or increased coercive reliance. Such mechanisms may preserve visible operation and delay rupture, but they do not necessarily restore the recognition relation on which deeper stability depends. The article therefore distinguishes among: continuity and stability; formal inclusion and consequence-bearing recognition; consent viability and satisfaction; performance and durable order reproduction; visible repair and structural restoration; operational continuity and underlying brittleness. The framework helps explain how organizations may remain externally intact, productive, procedurally active, electorally functional, financially successful, or symbolically coherent while becoming weaker in their deeper reproductive basis. Surface continuity may therefore coexist with structural drift, substitutional stabilization, and increasing sensitivity to disturbances in trust, recognition, performance, or participation. The theory is deliberately broader than any single regime type or organizational sector. Its scope may include political orders, public institutions, firms, parties, religious organizations, membership-based associations, and other durable organized forms, provided that they depend at least partly on recognition-mediated participation, acceptance, or consent for their continued reproduction. The article does not claim that all organizational instability is caused by recognition failure, that stable orders are morally legitimate, or that every decline follows one predetermined trajectory. Weakened recognition may lead to prolonged drift, fragmentation, performance dependence, symbolic hardening, coercive escalation, rupture, or abrupt reset depending on institutional conditions and available stabilizers. The contribution is theoretical and diagnostic rather than a prevalence study or a complete historical explanation of any single case. It provides a structured vocabulary for identifying when visible continuity reflects restored stability and when it instead rests on substitutes that preserve operation while deeper organizational viability deteriorates. Within the broader research programme on structural viability and drift, the article functions as a foundational theory of recognition, consent viability, organizational reproduction, substitution, and brittleness. Its concepts may also support adjacent work in political science, institutional analysis, organizational sociology, democratic theory, public administration, and criminology without being reducible to any one of those applications.
J. E. Fröderberg (Fri,) studied this question.