Striving for safety, impact, and equity: A critical consideration of AJCP publications on formal youth mentoring programs
In this virtual special issue (VSI) we curate and reflect upon 22 articles on formal youth mentoring previously published in the American Journal of Community Psychology (AJCP). First, we provide historical context and highlight AJCP's 2002 special issue on mentoring, which played an important...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of community psychology 2023-12, Vol.72 (3-4), p.258-270 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In this virtual special issue (VSI) we curate and reflect upon 22 articles on formal youth mentoring previously published in the American Journal of Community Psychology (AJCP). First, we provide historical context and highlight AJCP's 2002 special issue on mentoring, which played an important role in establishing youth mentoring as a vibrant area of research. Next, we review and discuss findings from subsequent AJCP studies in three interrelated lines of inquiry: (1) the importance of facilitating high‐quality mentoring relationships; (2) associations among youth's presenting needs, relationship quality, and outcomes; and (3) program practices leading to stronger, more impactful relationships. Throughout, we highlight and expand upon critical commentary from AJCP contributors, calling on the field to move away from paternalistic models that overly localize risk with youth and families without interrogating structural oppression. Our recommendations include: (1) centering critical consciousness, racial equity, and social justice in program curricula and mentor trainings; (2) respectfully engaging grassroots programs developed for and by communities of color that are underrepresented in research; (3) making meaningful efforts to recruit mentors from marginalized communities and removing barriers to their participation; and (4) examining youth's racial, ethnic, and other areas of identity development processes during mentoring.
Highlights
This VSI includes 22 curated articles on youth mentoring programs previously published in AJCP.
We review major findings and make critical reflections through a community psychology lens.
Research has helped develop safer, more effective mentoring practices to serve marginalized youth.
Scholars must interrogate oppressive social structures that impact youth's presenting needs.
We make recommendations for improving programs' cultural responsivity and ecological validity. |
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ISSN: | 0091-0562 1573-2770 1573-2770 |
DOI: | 10.1002/ajcp.12702 |