Yes, it was brief because of the short time. In a systemic approach, we understand protection work in four pillars.
On the one side we have to have the systems that are established in government through policies. You have a regulatory mode that helps to protect children. You create regulations and laws to ensure that certain things will happen and that certain things won't happen. That's one pillar.
The second pillar includes the services and systems that have to also exist within a country. This is with government heavily involved, and NGOs are also involved in those processes. The services can go from health and education to the protection services that are needed. Those also have to be set up.
A third pillar is working with the children themselves because they're a barrier against abuse. If they're strong, there are many things that can't happen. You have to have that piece.
Then, of course, the communal strengthening, so that families and religious authorities, depending on the issue that you're working on, are also involved with protection.
These four pillars are essential. You cannot get a good system that is sustainable without any of those pieces. Each of them take a lot of work. Sometimes you have different agencies working on different pillars or sometimes you have some that do the full work.
We're involved in all these pieces.