Rosa Morais Clark

Rosa Morais Clark

Communications & Events Manager

Biography

Rosa is the Communications & Events Manager at Crossref, where she leads external communications, oversees sponsorships, and creates content for different channels. She also plans events that help bring Crossref’s diverse community together and support its growth. With a background in admin management, Rosa is all about trying to encourage meaningful conversations and building connections. Outside of work, she loves good food, photography, and spending time with her family, friends, and dog.

Topics

  • Communications
  • Events
  • Sponsorships

Rosa Morais Clark's Latest Blog Posts

Twenty-five years of Crossref: reflections from the 2025 annual meeting and board election

Rosa Morais Clark, Wednesday, Dec 17, 2025

In Annual Meeting

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Crossref turned twenty-five this year, and our 2025 Annual Meeting became more than a celebration—it was a shared moment to reflect on how far open scholarly infrastructure has come and where we, as a community, are heading next.

Over two days in October, hundreds of participants joined online and in local satellite meetings in Madrid, Nairobi, Medan, Bogotá, Washington D.C., and London––a reminder that our community spans the globe. The meetings offered updates, community highlights, and a look at what’s ahead for our shared metadata network––including plans to connect funders, platforms, and AI tools across the global research ecosystem.

A second look at Crossref's carbon footprint - the 2024 report

Ed Pentz, Monday, Sep 15, 2025

In CommunityEnvironment

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In 2022, we wrote a blog post “Rethinking staff travel, meetings, and events” outlining our new approach to staff travel, meetings, and events with the goal of not going back to ‘normal’ after the pandemic and said that in the future we would report on our efforts to balance online and virtual events, work life balance for staff, and track our carbon emissions. In December 2024, we wrote a blog post, “Summary of the environmental impact of Crossref,” that gave an overview of 2023 and provided the first report on our carbon emissions. Our report on 2023 only just made it into 2024, so we are happy to report on 2024 a little sooner in the year.

From storage closet to metadata champions: ASM's journey toward a smarter scholarly infrastructure

David Haber, Monday, Aug 4, 2025

In CommunityMetadata Awards

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The American Society for Microbiology (ASM) has earned recognition in Crossref’s Participation Reports for its exceptional metadata coverage among large publishing members––an achievement built on intentional change, technical investment, and collaborative work. In this Q&A, the ASM team shares what that journey looked like, the challenges they’ve tackled, and how centering metadata has helped them better connect research with the global scientific community.

Scholarly blogs and their place in the research nexus

If you are reading this blog on our website, you may have noticed that alongside each post we now list a Crossref DOI link, which was not the case a few months ago (though we have retroactively added DOIs to all older posts too). You can find the persistent link for this post right above this paragraph. Go on, click on it, we’ll wait.

Sprinting to Progress: Behind the scenes of our first metadata sprint

Luis Montilla, Monday, Jun 23, 2025

In CommunityMetadataResearch Nexus

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If you take a peek at our blog, you’ll notice that metadata and community are the most frequently used categories. This is not a coincidence – community is central to everything we do at Crossref. Our first-ever Metadata Sprint was a natural step in strengthening both. Cue fanfare!. And what better way of celebrating 25 years of Crossref?

We designed the Crossref Metadata Sprint as a relatively short event where people can form teams and tackle short problems. What kind of problems? While we expected many to involve coding, teams also explored documenting, translating, researching—anything that taps into our open, member-curated metadata. Our motivation behind this format was to create a space for networking, collaboration, and feedback, centered on co-creation using the scholarly metadata from our REST API, the Public Data File, and other sources.

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