I would start by saying that our partnerships with Canadian civil society organizations are extremely valuable and absolutely important as part of our tool kit, and we really value them. However, they are not the only way in which it makes sense to do development in some of these contexts.
For example, working with international organizations allows us to go into very tough places. Sometimes United Nations organizations are those that have the infrastructure to be able to operate in conflict places. Also, with some of the international organizations, we can really leverage the funding of other donors or even if we.... For example, if we do development by investing and becoming shareholders of international financial institutions, they take the funds that we provide, put them on the market and make more money from them. Then you can do more development with those funds, so there are benefits to doing that.
The final thing I'll say is that sometimes we've learned—and this is an example from our women's voice and leadership program—that working with local organizations is a way to work with the grassroots and to stimulate change. It's just another effective mechanism in addition to Canadian civil society.