I'll give the example of Moldova. It's a little less complex than Canada, the United States or a comparative country because there are two primary ethnic groups in Moldova, but the Russian ethnic minority is at the tip of the spear of Russian state interference operations.
Moldova had an election last year that could have gone either way. The choice was a pro-EU candidate or an anti-EU candidate. There was a lot of investment by the national government and local civic actors to spread to the community authoritative sources of information about what happens if you are the recipient of, say, a Russian text message telling you to take cryptocurrency from an unknown Russian-based entity or individual. There was a lot of civic empowerment to do outreach to an ethnic minority—and the ethnic majority—but it was at the local level.
There's a lot that we bigger democracies can learn from a small, emerging democracy like Moldova that has done this house-to-house, community-to-community work to build more civic resilience.
