Maybe I'll just respond on behalf of Patricia. I'm right here with her—thanks, Peter and everyone.
Some of the best innovations are just working with local facilitators and local partners. We've seen this in, say, Burkina Faso, where we work with networks of bus drivers or truck drivers to spot children who may be at risk of trafficking outside of their countries and far from their communities.
In Somalia, in a recent project supported by the Government of Canada on early and forced child marriage, it was really critical to work with religious leaders, Islamic leaders, and as Peter was saying, have them publicly take stands against early and forced child marriage. That way we can work with them, and then when our project comes to an end, they will still be there to denounce this practice. But not just denounce it but also help girls find other choices that are going to be good for them.
Many of our innovations on the social side connect to the economic side, so that girls, as they grow up, also have economic choices. They learn market skills, they learn budgeting skills that will give them other choices, and they can discuss those with their families in the evenings, and come back to class the next day and learn more.
Some of these key innovations are right there in the community. Save the Children, in our work, has really learned to work with them and value how important those innovations are for the long term.