Rosetta was an early proponent of womanist theology. She presented as a panelist for the 1990 American Academy of Religion’s (AAR) Womanist Approaches to Religion and Society Group session and led a workshop during the first pre-AAR Womanist In-gathering in Philadelphia that celebrated womanist pedagogies. Soon after, Rosetta joined the Group’s steering committee and became co-chair for Marcia Riggs who succeeded Katie Geneva Cannon as chair. As an extension of trans-Atlantic collaborations of womanist foremothers Katie Geneva Cannon and Jacquelyn Grant with African women religion scholars Mercy Oduyoye, Elizabeth Amoah, Musimbi Kanyoro, and Bragilia Bam, Rosetta led 21st century Consultations of African and African Diasporan Women in Religion and Theology in Ghana and Brazil. Subsequently, Ross conceived and was founding board chair of The Daughters of the African Atlantic, which facilitates international, intergenerational, interfaith conversations that interrogate religions’ functions among African-descended women and offers micro grants to support academic study and community well-being.