I'll start, and then I can pass it over to Dr. Dubé.
When you look at the development of policy surrounding indigenous culture and how you make that real, I think you'll see that we're all trying ways of doing that and ways of integrating it into our approach.
When people put those measures through in Australia and the U.S. and New Zealand, that was their approach to their dilemma in their region. In my region in Denendeh in the Northwest Territories, if you look at all the different cultures and all of the different areas of belief, you see that the culture changes so much between those communities. We can't put them all in the same basket.
I believe that we have to be able to understand that conversation going out to indigenous peoples and see how they want to be involved in the conversation. It's not trying to make anything different; it's just trying to bring that conversation up.
I will leave that with you. It's providing an opportunity for them to be involved in the conversation in a meaningful way, in a way that means something to their culture, their being, and who they are and how they've been raised. That's been taken away for a long time.
We're trying to have that type of re-emergence in this area, and that's what we've tried to provide with Canadian Mountain Network.
Marsi.