Sure. I'm happy to speak about the accountability report.
First, I'd say the commitment that was made was historic. It was fantastic, and now it's a matter of getting it right. Also, the commitment to having this accountability reporting is a wonderful thing, not only because we can keep track of things, but also because we can readjust as we go along, so I really applaud the government for that.
I think the first year might have been to some extent a test run, so we have an opportunity to shape things differently. I think there's clearly an underinvestment in the four neglected areas of sexual and reproductive health and rights that we want to see more investments in. For everyone to know, they are safe abortions; contraception and access to comprehensive contraception; sex education, especially adolescent and youth; and advocacy for SRHR. If you look at those four areas, two areas in particular, sexual education and abortion, have received virtually no funding in the first year. We think it's in part because there hasn't been sufficient funding being directed to civil society partners and women's rights organizations. That can help balance it out.
I feel hopeful that we can get on the right trend, but it also means ramping up different kinds of partnerships. If you always work with the same actors in the same way, you don't get new results, so this is a real shift in Canadian aid funding. It's building on the work on maternal and newborn child health, but it's a new approach, so you need new partnerships. More partnerships with progressive women's rights actors can help increase those numbers.
I think something that's been encouraging is on advocacy. There have been investments in advocacy work. This is something that's a promising trend in the report and that we would like to see more of.