Thanks.
That's kind of, in a nutshell, the purpose of this large initiative we have on education.
It does work sort of at the country level in terms of scale-improving innovations and adapting them to the local context. Often they are multi-country projects. There are three or four countries that we're working on. We're trying to scale things in Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya, for example. There's that knowledge sharing within the region.
As I said, we have these four regional hubs—one for each...sort of way we carve out the world; two in Africa, one in Asia and one in Latin America. We have up to 20 countries that come together to identify what their pain points are when it comes to education. What do they need to know? Where don't they have evidence? What works? They share it with the neighbouring countries.
In addition to that, we have some programs that are what we call global projects, which sort of ensure that we're capturing global public goods on education knowledge and education, and infuse that back into the local systems.