“…As for philanthropy, various ethnographic, anthropological and sociological studies focus on the possible enhanced role of personal relations between donors and recipients of help (for an overview of the topic: Fechter, 2019). Among these several authors have taken notice of the working of kinship and familial idioms and metaphors in the construction of personal donor-recipient relationships: in case of international development and humanitarian child-sponsorship (Bornstein, 2001(Bornstein, , 2012Dra ˛_ zkiewicz, 2020;Fechter, 2019;Noh, 2019;Rabbitts, 2012;Zarzycka, 2016;Zakaria ´s & Feischmidt, 2020), in personal mentoring schemes of disadvantaged students built upon volunteering in educational and welfare settings (Molpeceres et al, 2012), in a historical account of donor identity formation by the Red Cross (Dromi, 2021), and more recently in personalised helping and mentoring of refugee minors residing in Western European countries (Raithelhuber, 2019;Scheibelhofer, 2019;Aflaki & Freise, 2019).…”