Thank you. The examples that I used in my research were of a rather different scenario from that of Canada and of the U.K. Largely this arose from the enlargement process, whereby states that have applied to join have to be brought into the system of thinking, so the opportunity to align was part of that. Then it was extended to these other countries in partnership countries in the western Balkans. It's a way of sensitizing them to EU foreign policy generally, but the focus has been on sanctions.
With Canada and the U.K. now, it is rather different. The situation is also one in which it's more difficult for an outsider to find information, mainly because when you're talking about individuals, you need to keep that information as tightly controlled as possible.
You have the institutional difficulty with the EU not being a state and relying on information that comes from national agencies as well.