It's not unique to Uganda and we are trying very much to replicate it, but indeed taking into account housing, land, and property rights issues. In Uganda, the land is owned one of three ways: by the state, public land; privately owned; or by the tribes. Northern Uganda has—I don't remember now anymore—a large number of different tribes and subdivides. The privately owned land is actually very limited in the northern part of the country. It's more land owned by tribes or public land.
What happened in the first instance was the government offered the land and people had plots of land attributed to them. When that became unavailable because there were too many people, the host tribes decided to lend the land to the newcomers. It's based on some arrangement where they cultivate the land, and some of the harvest is given back to the community. It's an arrangement that benefits—and that's really, in a way, the beauty of it—both the refugees and the host Ugandans who were underprivileged because, as you may know, the northern part of the country was where the LRA, with Joseph Kony, was established for quite a long time. That area was underdeveloped. That has allowed for development actors to step in, rebuild roads, and develop agricultural projects.