Obviously, one needs to move toward innovative solutions here. Just to take a concrete example, I'd like to point out that many of the innovations here are social innovations.
There's a group working in West Africa—initially on female genital mutilation, more recently on child development, and I think also on child marriage—called Tostan. They've come to realize that there are deeply rooted cultural issues here about all of the things we talked about. They engage community leaders. They get them to publicly renounce these practices and just change the local cultural norms. That itself is a form of social innovation, to take that particular approach.
Canada can actually stimulate ideas like that—I just used that concrete example—see which ones work best, and scale them. I also know that this is an area, again, where Save the Children, which is such a fantastic group, has a lot of experience. I'm sure our colleagues from Save the Children will have some great ideas about solutions as well.
I just want to highlight the role of innovation, the simple innovations, and we're blessed in Canada to have a group of 70 organizations working together right from the innovation and idea generation end through to the implementation and programming end. Save the Children would be a fantastic example and that's a real asset that we have.
If I may, I'd like to invite Patricia to also comment on the second part of your question because it's such a fantastic group and we work so closely together.