I think it's important to look at the legal framework here. There's a vast array of responses that Canada employs, and my colleague can definitely talk about the resettlement and the complementary pathways types of programs.
When you're looking at asylum, Canada's system is fairly robust. It is a system that we often look to as an example to the world. It was developed with a certain number of claims in mind that we would receive a year, around 50,000 to 60,000 claims. The harder part right now is looking at how to make that system more flexible for the larger number of asylum claims that we are receiving.
That is possible to do within the current framework, and it is possible to look at things like differentiated case processing. This basically means treating different cases and files from different countries at a different rate. Let's say that if you have a case of Afghans who are coming and making asylum claims, you would process their cases much faster than you would process claims from people of a different nationality if their cases are more complex, for instance. That would help you address backlogs in the system.
There is a lot of work being done at the government level, and at UNHCR's level as well, to look at Canada's asylum system and see if it's flexible enough and if there are tweaks that could be made, and there are always improvements, I believe, that could be made on that side.
My colleague can speak on the resettlement and complementary pathways.