The term “Stockholm Syndrome” is a phrase that’s become deeply ingrained in our cultural lexicon, frequently appearing in crime reporting, courtroom dramas, and popular media. It’s often presented as a straightforward explanation for why victims might appear to develop a sympathetic connection with their captors. However, despite its widespread use, the scientific grounding of this psychological concept is increasingly being questioned by researchers and survivors alike.
This phenomenon is frequently invoked to explain seemingly counterintuitive victim behaviour, finding its way into legal defence strategies and media portrayals of abuse cases. Yet, its pervasive influence hasn’t translated into formal recognition within the leading psychiatric diagnostic manuals.
Journalist Jess Hill, in her book See What You Made Me Do, posits that the concept gained traction not through rigorous clinical evidence, but rather through interpretation and sheer repetition. She argues that its perceived authority stems more from its frequent utterance than from any solid proof.
Beth Collier, through her Substack publication Curious Minds, has meticulously traced the expansion of this idea beyond its Swedish origins. She highlights the role of New York police psychologist Dr. Harvey Schlossberg, who is credited with promoting the concept within US law enforcement circles. His aim was to provide officers with a framework for understanding hostage situations, a notion that subsequently permeated FBI training programs.
Skepticism surrounding “Stockholm Syndrome” isn’t a new development. Historian David King, in his book Six Days in August, recounts how critics once derided the concept as “schlock science parading about as certified scholarship.”
The Origin Story: A Stockholm Bank Robbery
The term itself traces its roots back to a dramatic bank robbery that unfolded in Stockholm in August 1973. Jan-Erik Olsson, armed and audacious, burst into a bank, firing shots and proclaiming, “The party has just begun!” What followed was a six-day siege during which four individuals, including 23-year-old Kristin Enmark, were held captive.
Early Interpretations vs. Complex Realities
Initial analyses by both law enforcement and the media fixated on what they perceived as an unusual bond forming between the captors and their hostages. However, later accounts suggest a far more nuanced and complex reality.
Kristin Enmark herself recounted her initial terror in a 1974 interview with The New Yorker, stating, “I believed a maniac had come into my life.”
Collier’s research sheds light on the role of Clark Olofsson, a fellow criminal who was brought into the bank by police. He is credited with helping to de-escalate the situation. According to Collier, Olofsson reassured the hostages, loosened their restraints, and even publicly declared, “I am on the poor girls’ side.”
Small Gestures, Growing Distrust
During the harrowing ordeal, hostages later described small acts of kindness that helped to alleviate their fear. Elisabeth Oldgren, for instance, was widely reported at the time as saying, “They have been real gentlemen toward us.”
Simultaneously, a palpable distrust of the authorities began to fester among the hostages. In a recorded phone call cited by ABC News, Enmark expressed her profound disappointment with Prime Minister Olof Palme, accusing him of “playing checkers with our lives” and warning that police actions could prove fatal.
The Label That Shaped Perceptions
These moments, tinged with both fear and unexpected interactions, became the bedrock upon which a broader theory was constructed. Psychiatrist Nils Bejerot, who advised the police during the siege but never directly interviewed the hostages, coined the term that would come to be known as Stockholm Syndrome.
However, the individuals at the centre of the event consistently challenged this interpretation. Sven Säfström, for example, refuted any speculation about abuse, stating unequivocally, “There was no intimate relationship.”
Kristin Enmark has maintained throughout the years that her actions were a matter of survival. “It is impossible to imagine how it feels to be under death threats,” she later explained.
The Enduring Power of a Simple Narrative
Despite these personal accounts and the lack of formal scientific validation, the label “Stockholm Syndrome” has persisted. As both Jess Hill and David King suggest, the term endures because it offers a deceptively simple explanation for behaviours that are inherently complex and multifaceted.
The continued reliance on this term in media portrayals and legal proceedings raises a critical question: When victims exhibit behaviour that deviates from expected norms, are we truly seeking to understand their experiences, or are we instead fitting them into a narrative that was never entirely accurate to begin with? The enduring question remains whether “Stockholm Syndrome” is a valid psychological phenomenon or a convenient, yet ultimately misleading, label.


















