The two most obvious, for us, are the U.K. and the U.S.
To me, because the U.S. does this better than anyone else in the world in terms of enforcement, and also because they're our closest partner and the one we align our sanctions regime most closely with, it makes sense to look to them.
I'm not an expert in the details, but I would suggest the U.K. because they revamped their processes. They saw all the same problems a little over 10 years ago in the U.K. and they revamped their processes with respect to who is doing this work and how even the listing process is being helped out by intelligence agencies and public and private sector contributions. Canada just hasn't done that sort of revamping work. That might be something to look at as well—what they did, why they did it and what lessons could be learned for Canada.