Shaker, Genevieve G.Plater, William M.2022-06-062022-06-062011-10-30Shaker, G. G., & Plater, W. M. (2011). The Global Public Good: Students, Higher Education, and Communities of Good. Higher Learning Research Communications, 6(2). https://doi.org/10.18870/hlrc.v6i2.332https://hdl.handle.net/1805/29245Along with introducing the purpose and cohesion of the essays that form this special issue, we also wish to highlight the force on which all of these lofty hopes depend: educated students. Without question, the authors who wrote these essays understand and appreciate the importance of students, especially as the prepared and empowered agents of future actions that will be sustainably transformative in the conduct of their lives. In fact, students are so pervasively important to most discussions of higher education and the public good, including the UNESCO report, that they are often taken for granted in a rush to address institutional and faculty responsibilities. However, no student of any age or educational goal should ever be far from consideration. They are indeed fully present in the essays that comprise this issue of Higher Learning Research Communications.enAttribution-NonCommercial 4.0 InternationalUNESCO reportrethinking educationcommunity engagementThe Global Public Good: Students, Higher Education, and Communities of GoodArticle