200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Stephen Frosh, Professor of psychosocial studies

Stephen Frosh was appointed to Birkbeck’s department of Psychology in 1979. A specialist in the psychosocial approaches to human psychology, he initially worked part-time in the College, dividing his time with clinical jobs in the NHS and at the Tavistock Clinic as Consultant Clinical Psychologist. He stopped his clinical work in 1998 when he was appointed professor.

Due to the pressures of competing with the neuroscience branch of psychology for research funding and prestige, he eventually helped to found the current Psychosocial Studies department which then had five staff including Frosh.

To help the process of forging an intellectual community, Frosh founded and co-directed with interdisciplinary scholar Sasha Roseneil the Birkbeck Institute for Social Research (BISR) as an umbrella centre for people working in the field.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Sophie Bray – Olympic hockey player

Occupational psychology graduate Sophie Bray is best known for her international hockey success on the England team. She helped England to a gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro in a tense final against the Netherlands that went to a penalty shoot-out. Sophie retired from international hockey in 2019 but still plays in the Investec Women’s Hockey League for East Grinstead. She was named the league’s Player of the Season in 2018-19.

Along with the rest of the England hockey team upon their success in Rio, she was made an MBE for services to hockey.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Siobhan Baker, STEM Learning UK and ‘Coding Black Females’

A full-stack software developer, Siobhan Baker first entered the tech industry in 2017 as Community Manager for a social enterprise aiming to get more women into tech. She continued to work while studying a part-time Master’s in Philosophy at Birkbeck.  

8th Light, a network of software, design and technology professionals, offered her a job as a software intern and she has since risen through the ranks to become a senior software developer. She also now works as a strategy consultant for non-profit Coding Black Females, which aims to provide development opportunities and a safe space in which black women can thrive in the tech industry. This is especially important as, according to national statistics, only 1% of people in the IT industry are black women. 

Siobhan acts as a role model for other black women, giving talks to inspire those in the early stages of their career to reach their potential in this traditionally male-dominated industry. 

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Simon Fourmy, director of Julia and Rans Rausing Foundation

Grants manager for a series of philanthropic initiatives, Simon Fourmy is now Head of Grants for the Julia and Hand Rausing Trust, responsible for gifting millions in funding to charities in the United Kingdom working in the space of health, welfare, education, arts and culture. The Trust aims to provide opportunities for all in these areas, as well as benefiting society by supporting initiatives that foster care for those in need.  

Simon studied Management at Birkbeck in 2012 while he was director of grants for the Wolfson Foundation, an independent charity offering grants in the education, science, culture and health industries. While at the Wolfson Foundation, he developed a flagship postgraduate scholarship programme. 

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Shola Mos-Shobabimu, political and women’s rights activist

Dr Shola Mos-Shogbamimu is a high profile political & women’s rights activist, a New York Attorney and Solicitor of England & Wales, writer. She is also a public speaker and political commentator featuring regularly in mainstream and online media. 

Dr Mos-Shogbamimu established She@LawTalks to promote women and also black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) leadership in the legal profession through universities and secondary schools. 

She received her PhD from Birkbeck and is the founder of the Women in Leadership publication as a platform to drive positive change on topical issues that impact women globally through inspiring personal leadership journeys.   

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Sarah Weir, Fellow of Birkbeck

She began her working life as a gofer for Aldgate Group Brokers, making her way up over 15 years to become its Managing Director and the first female MD in a Lloyd’s broking firm. However, having got to the top she felt a sense of anti-climax and lack of complete fulfilment. She then started a part-time degree at Birkbeck, aged 31, left her City insurance career a year into this and changed direction completely into the arts world. 

While studying for her History of Art BA she took a job at the Purdy Hicks Gallery, moving to Arts and Business as Deputy Chief Executive, before joining the Royal Academy of Arts as its fundraising director. She then became Executive Director of the Almeida Theatre and by 2003 was running Arts Council England, London. Between 2008 and 2011 she was Head of Arts and Cultural Strategy for the Olympic Delivery Authority, developing over 40 permanent artistic commissions integrated into the Olympic Park. 

From there, Sarah went on to found The Legacy List, the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park charity. This was set up in 2011 to encourage creative connections between people and the park, with a focus on arts and culture, education and skills.   

Sarah was awarded an OBE for services to the arts in the January 2012 New Year Honours. 

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Samuel Kasumu, special advisor to the Prime Minister

Samuel is an award-winning social entrepreneur, commentator, and strategist. He served as Special Advisor to PM Boris Johnson where he held the Civil Society and Communities brief. His work included leading on the cross-government vaccine deployment confidence programme. He was the most senior black Advisor in government. 

He has extensive senior leadership and board experience, acting as Non-Executive Director at challenger energy firm Ovo’s Foundation arm and under former Prime Minister Theresa May he was a member of the Race Disparity Audit Advisory Board. He is the founder of Inclusive Boards, an executive headhunting firm specialising in non-executive board appointments across sectors. Samuel is an elected local councillor in Hertfordshire and brings extensive knowledge of how local and national government works. 

Samuel has been involved in setting up and growing a number of initiatives to support the progression of Briton’s black and minority ethnic population. This includes setting up a student network connecting peers with employers whilst at university that grew to 30,000 members. 

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Ryan Wilson, economics student

Left disabled after taking part in a failed drug trial, and needing to pivot from his intended career path as a plumber, Ryan Wilson enrolled on an undergraduate Economic and Social Policy course at Birkbeck. Alongside studying, he raised his young son and worked as an independent prison monitor, ensuring the decency of prisons and humane treatment of prisoners.  

On his experience at Birkbeck, Ryan paid tribute to the disability and mental health service as well as the academically rich environment in Economics: “I worked so hard and loved the lectures – my favourite modules were Economics and Public Policy, and Macroeconomic Theory and Policy. I struggled in my second year with studying for my degree and overcoming some personal hurdles, but the support I received from the disability team and the mental health service really increased my confidence and drive to succeed.” 

He graduated in 2020 with first class honours. 

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Roy Foster, historian of Ireland

Roy is a Professor of Irish History and Literature 

Foster’s best-selling Modern Ireland 1600-1972 (1988), written and published while he was at Birkbeck, was an influential example of historical scholarship whose sensitivities to the different but interwoven cultures of Northern Ireland opened up dialogues between communities. It was his emphasis on complexity or, as Foster put it, on the “varieties of Irishness”, that changed the way Irish history was understood. 

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Ronald Tress, economist and Master of Birkbeck 1968-77

Ronald Tress was a British economist. 

He studied Economics 1933–36 at University College, Southampton taking a University of London degree. 

From 1941 he was an economic adviser to the British War Cabinet for four years. He became a Professor of Political Economy at the University of Bristol in 1951. He was Master of Birkbeck from 1968 to 1977. He was elected a Fellow of Birkbeck in 1977. He became director of the Leverhulme Trust of 1978.