Abstract
Tutoring and mentoring have become central pillars of inclusive and equitable higher education systems worldwide, particularly as universities confront increasing diversification, massification, and persistent structural inequalities. Although their historical roots extend back to classical tutorial traditions, contemporary tutoring and mentoring practices have evolved into sophisticated academic and psychosocial support mechanisms aligned with student-centered pedagogies, institutional inclusivity goals, and global policy frameworks such as UNESCO’s Education 2030 agenda. This article presents a theoretical integrative review offering a comprehensive understanding of the two concepts and thier implications in fostering equity and quality within higher education. Drawing on national and international literature, the article traces how tutoring and mentoring support academic success, psychosocial well-being, professional development, and student belonging. A major focus is placed on the relationship between tutoring, mentoring, and quality inclusive education, emphasising international policy contexts and empirical findings on relational pedagogy, equity of access, and disparities linked to private tutoring (“shadow education”). The paper proposes a conceptual framework that situates tutoring and mentoring as relational, pedagogical, and structural interventions necessary for building equitable, student-centered, and socially just higher education systems.