Submission guidelines

Please, contact the Book Series editor, Dr. Benjamin Kutsyuruba at [email protected] to find out more about the series and submit a proposal.

See our guidance on how to write a proposal

Download a proposal form

Current open calls for chapters

Current open call for books

Editorial team

Benjamin Kutsyuruba is a Professor of Educational Leadership, Policy, and School Law in the Faculty of Education, Queen's University at Kingston, Ontario. Throughout his career, Benjamin has worked as a teacher, researcher, manager, and professor in the field of education in Ukraine and Canada. For 10 years, he served as an Associate Director of Social Program Evaluation Group (SPEG). His research interests include educational policymaking; educational leadership; mentoring across the professions; induction, mentorship, and professional development of teachers; trust, moral agency, and ethical decision-making in education; international education; school climate, safety, well-being, and flourishing; and, educational change, reform, and restructuring. His current research projects focus on positive leadership, flourishing in schools, educator and leader wellbeing, and mentoring practices in international settings. Benjamin can be contacted at: [email protected] 

Calls for submissions

This series publishes national and international perspectives on research-based guidance and practitioner orientation for enhancing the practice and theory of mentoring, while also exploring tensions and dilemmas of mentoring processes and programmatic components.

Aims and scope

Mentoring is an important aspect of professional development and talent management efforts in a wide variety of fields such as health sciences, education, business, engineering, and social work. Mentoring entails forming a mutually supportive and learning relationship between the more experienced (mentor) and less experienced (protégé) colleagues for the purposes of personal support and professional learning. There is an increased interest in the topic of mentoring in the workplace on a global scale. Research indicates that those who receive mentoring rise faster in their organisations and have more success in their careers than those who did not. This book series is interested in national and international perspectives on research-based guidance and practitioner orientation for enhancing the practice and theory of mentoring, while also exploring tensions and dilemmas of mentoring processes and programmatic components. 

A volume published within this series incorporates conceptual and/or empirical workthat contributes to our understanding of various aspects of the mentoring process in a variety of organisational settings and contexts. The series does not have a particular geographic focus. Theoretical and empirical works are welcome that deal with any country or region, as well as those which are intended to provide broad, comparative overviews of a particular topic (e.g., mentoring programs; mentoring across the professions; mentoring of early career teachers; peer mentoring in higher education; connection between mentoring and coaching, new trends and approaches to mentoring; mentoring program effectiveness, etc.). 

We have proudly partnered with the International Mentoring Association for this series, with the joint aim to share practices and research with the global community for the development and enhancement of mentoring programs and relationships across disciplines and contexts.

This title is aligned with our quality education for all goal

We believe in quality education for everyone, everywhere and by highlighting the issue and working with experts in the field, we can start to find ways we can all be part of the solution.

SDG 4 Quality education
SDG 10 Reduced inequalities
SDG 16 Peace, justice & strong institutions
Find out about our quality education for all goal