Brooke Rogers
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Marian Brooke Rogers | |
|---|---|
Rogers speaks to the War Studies KCL department in 2013 | |
| Alma mater | Rollins College (USA) |
| Scientific career | |
| Institutions | King's College London |
| Thesis | Religious identity, religiosity and self-esteem : perceived relationships within a multi-dimensional framework (2003) |
| Website | Brooke Rogers at King's College London |
Marian Brooke Rogers OBE is a British psychologist who is a Professor of Behavioural Science and Security at King's College London where she is Vice Dean (People & Planning) in the Faculty of Social Science and Public Policy (SSPP). She is a social psychologist who studies risk and threat. In 2014 she was asked to chair the Cabinet Office Behavioural Science Expert Group (BSEG). In 2019 she was appointed Chair of the Home Office Science Advisory Council (HOSAC).[1] Professor Rogers was appointed to the Prime Minister's Council for Science and Technology in 2020. In 2025, she was appointed Chief Scientific Adviser at the Home Office.[2]
Rogers trained in social psychology and specialised in the study of the relationship between attitudes, beliefs, and behaviour.[3] She obtained her PhD degree from Royal Holloway, University of London in 2003.[4] After earning her doctorate, Rogers joined the University of Leeds as a postdoctoral researcher before moving to King's College London as a research fellow in the King's Centre for Risk Management.[5] Her early work explored the formation of religious attitudes and beliefs and the impact of these attitudes and believes on behaviour and mental health. Her interest in the interactions between attitudes, beliefs, and behaviour evolved and led her to explore risk perception and risk communication across a variety of contexts (e.g., doctor-patient communication in paediatric cardiac care; public understanding of medicines information; public perceptions of nuclear power; public responses to terrorist events, etc.). Some of her earliest investigations into chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) events looked to support hospitals in their planning for radiological warfare.[6][7]