I can point to a very specific example, because it's one Project Ploughshares has been involved in. The Nairobi declaration and protocol process that emerged essentially since 2001 has drawn together east African and Horn of Africa countries to look at a regional approach to addressing small arms and light weapons. As a result of that, they've come to some standards on how to deal with movements of weapons in their region.
They now have a set of national focal points within their governments, which they didn't have previous to 2001, where there are people who are explicitly given the task of monitoring certain aspects of small arms that correspond to commitments under the program of action. There is also a regional office that is in communication with all those national focal points. There is a civil society network that's following and monitoring how these national focal points and the regional office are operating, which I think is equally important.
I think there we see a situation where a number of groups that now have some expertise in arms issues that didn't exist a few years ago are starting to work with local governments to try to address the small arms problem. So that's a very specific example of where there has been some movement forward since 2001.