The outcomes of Canada's second review outlined that children in remote regions, for example, need special attention. When we ask why the maternal mortality rates and under-five rates have gone up, it's largely in rural and more remote regions. That was one group.
Children with disabilities were named in terms of some inequitable treatments in education. Canada did not have any information on street children in its second report, and some civil society groups brought information to the committee about children in the streets--in Montreal, Toronto--and homelessness with young people. So there's a category of vulnerability.
We would say that there are different groups of vulnerabilities in Canada. The inequity among children—that's why I come back to that theme—is really important in Canada. It makes it harder, in some ways, because many children are doing quite well in Canada, but we have real pockets of concern. A rights-based approach should lead you to address those.