Very briefly, neither I nor my organization is an authority in the corruption area, but I would certainly point you to the work that is being done by Transparency International. The head of Transparency International in Canada is Wesley Cragg. They can address these issues much more usefully than I can.
One thing that Transparency International has done is develop an annual or a biannual humiliation index. All countries in the world are listed in order of the degree of their corruption. I think Canada has slipped a bit; we're now at number six. It's the sort of thing that, with publicity, can have some impact.
One of the great difficulties--and this came up in the discussion with the previous panels--is of course that in countries where corruption is most severe, it can be seen that western countries, western cultures, are trying to impose their values, and there is a resistance to that. So there should be as much effort as possible to develop and support homegrown resistance to cultures, and I think that's one of the things that Transparency International does.
On partnerships, we at FOCAL, the Canadian Foundation for the Americas, are very much in favour of the development of partnerships. We have very useful ones with a number of countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.