Community Engagement Steering Group
The CESG is responsible for identifying outreach needs for the DataCite community, including current and potential DataCite members as well as the broader research community. This includes monitoring and assessing community needs and providing feedback on DataCite’s priorities and services; recommending strategies and tools to communicate about DataCite’s services, features, and plans; helping to build relationships, cultivate discussions and promote collaboration among the DataCite community; and involvement in DataCite’s annual meetings. The CESG aligns its work with the Services and Technology Steering Group so that activities support DataCite’s services and products. In addition, the CESG will coordinate with other new and existing DataCite governance groups as required.
Refer to the Terms of Reference for more information.
Current CESG Members

Natasha Simons
Chair
Australian Research
Data Commons,
Australia
Natasha Simons is Director, National Coordination, for the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). She leads a large, talented team of Program Managers and Subject Matter Experts contributing to deliver ARDC’s strategic Research Data Commons initiatives. Based at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Natasha is passionate about bringing out the best in people and creating high performing teams. She has a high international profile in the area of research data infrastructure and enjoys collaborating to solve common data challenges, particularly through the global Research Data Alliance. Natasha holds a number of positions on international Boards and is co-chair of the DataCite Community Engagement Steering Group and the APAC Expert Group.

Mark Call
Center for Open Science,
USA
Mark is a Product Manager at the Center for Open Science, where they guide the development of the Open Science Framework by translating user needs into actionable improvements. With a background in UX research and human factors, He focuses on creating intuitive workflows that support data sharing and registration. He holds a master’s in Human Factors and Applied Cognition and is passionate about engaging with the research community to build accessible, user-centered tools. As part of DataCite’s Community Engagement Steering Group, he aims to help address community challenges and improve research infrastructure.

Tekleweyni Geday
Mekelle University,
Ethiopia
Tekleweyni Geday (Ethiopia) earned his Bachelor’s degree in Information Science from Jimma University and a Master’s degree in Information Technology from the University of Gondar. Since November 2013, he has been serving as a lecturer in the Department of Information Science at Mekelle University, Ethiopia. He is passionate about Open Science and promoting the importance of Open Research Infrastructure.
ተኽለወይኒ ገዳይ ወለገብርኤል ይበሃል – ካብ ትግራይ ኢትዮጵያ። ካብ ጅማ ዩኒቨርስቲ ብኢንፎርሜሽን ሳይንስ ናይ መጀመርያ ዲግሪ፣ ካብ ዩኒቨርስቲ ጎንደር ድማ ብኢንፎርሜሽን ቴክኖሎጂ ማስተርስ ዲግሪ ረኺበ። ካብ ሕዳር 2006 ዓ.ም ጀሚረ ኣብ ኢትዮጵያ ዩኒቨርስቲ መቐለ ኣብ ክፍሊ ኢንፎርሜሽን ሳይንስ መምህር ኮይነ የገልግል ኣለኹ። ኣብ ሞያ ምርምር ንምስጓም ይሰርሕ ኣለኹ።

Martin Gengenbach
National Library of New Zealand,
New Zealand
Martin is the Digital Preservation Policy and Outreach Specialist at the National Library of New Zealand, where he supports digital preservation capabilities within the Library and works to develop digital preservation communities of practice throughout Aotearoa New Zealand. Martin is also a consortium lead for the New Zealand DOI Consortium, and he is excited to learn more about how to build that community through the work of the CESG. He has a Master’s in Information and Library Science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Hana Heringová
NTK – National Library of Technology,
Czechia
Hana joined the National Library of Technology in Prague in 2022 and is currently the head of its National Centre for Persistent Identifiers. The Centre supports the use of PIDs on the national level and leads the national ORCID and DataCite consortia. Hana has a background in information and library science and has experience with information services in a public institution as well as a multinational private company.

Amy Hodge
Stanford University,
USA
Amy assists members of the Stanford community with sharing and preservation of research outputs in the Stanford Digital Repository (SDR). She is the Product Owner for the SDR’s self-deposit application and co-manages the campus DOI service. Prior to joining Stanford Libraries in 2012, Amy worked on scientific databases in the biotech and biofuels industries, developing methods for collecting and synthesizing sophisticated information into easy-to-understand formats. Amy earned a PhD in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry from Yale University, where she studied cell cycle regulation in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Fredrick Kiwuwa Lugya
Busitema University,
Uganda
Fredrick Kiwuwa Lugya is a PhD (Illinois) Library and Information Science graduate certified in Quality Assurance Practice, E-Learning Pedagogy, Library Automation and Digitization, Administrative Law, and Project Monitoring and Evaluation. With over 18 years of experience, he has delivered top-notch information services, including heading the Busitema University (BU) Library. Fredrick is grounded in human information behavior research intersecting the concepts and principles relating to people, information, and systems, with a strong emphasis on context. Before joining BU, Fredrick led the digitisation agenda of Makerere University Library and implemented library technology projects in government and corporate firms.

Sheila Rabun
Lyrasis,
USA
Sheila Rabun is the Program Leader for Persistent Identifier Communities at Lyrasis, where she manages the Lyrasis DataCite US Community consortium and the ORCID US Community consortium. In this role, she works with non-profit organizations across the US to support open research infrastructure by using persistent identifiers to make research and scholarly content more FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable). Sheila has worked in the academic library field since 2010, with a focus on digital workflows, agile project management, communicating technical information to diverse audiences, and advocating for interoperability in cultural heritage, research, and scholarly communication ecosystems.

Carly Robinson
SPARC,
USA
Carly Robinson is a Senior Policy Fellow at SPARC. She leads SPARC’s efforts to advance policies related to persistent identifiers and metadata standards and contributes more broadly to SPARC’s policy work on open research. Her role also includes exploring the intersection of AI and research access policies, as well as collaborating with SPARC’s broader advocacy team. She has a Ph.D. and M.S. in Atmospheric Chemistry from the University of Colorado, and a B.S. in Applied Physics from Michigan Technological University.

Paula Saavedra
Consortia SAS,
Colombia
Paula Saavedra is Project Manager at Consortia SAS, where she is the leader of the processes of loyalty, technological project management, management of the DataCite Consortium in Colombia through Papyrus-datos.co and the ORCID Consortium. From Consortia we support institutions to strengthen their research capabilities, high-quality resource consultation and use of persistent identifiers. Paula is a systems engineer with a specialization in IT projects.

Nadia Smaili
Khemis Miliana University,
Algeria
A lecturer in Library Science and Documentation at Djilali Bounaama University in Algeria. She serves as the Head of the Information Technology and Documentation specialty and manages the repository of scientific production at the University of Algiers 2. Her research interests focus on grey literature and informal publishing in the context of open access, open science, and open archives. Prof. Smaili has made significant contributions through research and participation in forums on open access and academic grey literature, furthering discussions in these critical areas of open science.

Adam Vials Moore
FAIR Research Consultancy
and Management,
Great Britain
Adam is a product specialist focused on persistent identifiers and open research infrastructure. With experience spanning metacognitive learning, bioinformatics, and repository architectures, he works to enhance the discoverability and accessibility of research outputs through robust metadata and PIDs. At Jisc, he supports the UK ORCID consortium and contributes to developing interoperable scholarly infrastructure. His current interests include exploring how global PID networks and metadata standards can advance equitable access to research, while fostering the interconnected nature of scholarly information systems through open infrastructure development.
Lijuan Wang
Computer Network Information Center,
Chinese Academy of Sciences,
China

Sarah Wright
Cornell University,
USA
Sarah is a Research Data and Life Sciences Librarian at Cornell University’s Albert R. Mann Library, and a long-standing and active member of Cornell’s Research Data Management Service Group. She is also a member of the Data Curation Network, a community-led organization that works to develop educational resources and facilitates conversations around data curation topics in addition to providing a multi-institutional shared-curation workflow for curating data. Sarah’s interests include data curation, sharing, and preservation, and open science and research reproducibility in the molecular and life sciences disciplines. Sarah has a B.S. in Biochemistry, Cellular and Molecular Biology, and M.S. degrees in Botany and in Information Science.