Well, I can draw on our experience of something we call Citizen Voice and Action, which I think I referred to earlier. It's our social accountability tool that we use for local-level advocacy in the countries where we work.
It's not an expensive thing, it's a tool. It takes some time to be trained on the tool, but it's about helping people at the local level—including children and youth who are very excited about this tool because they can see immediate results from being engaged in it. It's a tool that helps them ask the questions about the responsibility of their local government around meeting their particular needs.
So when you go into a community and you ask children and youth what it is they need, they're very clear about their needs and what needs to be done. The role of the local government is not as clear to them. When they're exposed to learning how to read budgets, read the local development plan, the local community plan, then they're in a position where they can ask questions.
What we have found is that it's not an antagonistic relationship with local government, because the local government wants to be engaged with the community and wants to be able to respond to their needs. What we found with using that tool around health is that we've seen a huge increase in, for example, the number of skilled birth attendants, because families will say it's a need that they have.
Around child protection, I can imagine they would make clear demands around the needs that they have related to safe working environments, for youth in particular.
That would be my response.