Abstract
This paper discusses Romani mentors’ mixed experiences, views and coping practices in an intra-ethnic ‘natural mentoring’ project targeting young Romani (more commonly known as ‘Gypsy’) students in Spain. The intervention transforms already existing intra-ethnic bonds into mentorships in local Spanish Romani communities. To meet the aims of this research, observations were conducted at mentors’ follow-up meetings and other project activities, and individual semi-structured interviews were held with three female and three male mentors. The mentors’ mixed views and experiences are analysed in four dimensions: competence, commitment, project operation and sociocultural change. From a critical stance, the results suggest that mentoring remains highly apolitical, having as its primary object ‘people to be developed’ and not the structure that is to do the developing. In this endeavour, mentoring is instrumentalized to create self-regulated ‘active’ citizens desiring to be acted upon through ‘technologies of the self’.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 Springboard to Roma Youth Success (STORY_S). JUST/REC-777257. 2018-19
2 Ex. “Big brother: mentoring program for Roma youth” in Romania through EEA Grants