Undoubtedly. That's one thing the unified family court is trying to do. It's trying to have staff members who can help guide them through and hold information sessions. That's so important.
It's so foreign, not just to the indigenous population but to everybody, to go to a court. A court's not where people want to end up. It's a very stressful time. The idea of the unified family court is that we would get specialized clerks and people who are doing just that kind of work, who can explain how to fill out the forms. Still, there's a lot of work to be done.
The procedure in courts can be complex. Professor Bala mentioned streamlining our rules of civil procedure, those court rules that are designed by lawyers for lawyers. Now we have to design those for people who aren't lawyers so that they can have access. Part of it is whether, and in some instances how, we can resolve these, short of having a litigious process. Indigenous communities have a lot to offer on that kind of idea, everything from custom adoption to—