There's a tendency, I think, in the Canadian media to talk about the gender in trade agenda as something that's the Trudeau government's invention. I'd like to underscore that actually this agenda is very broad-based. We can look to a lot of partners and countries, particularly European countries but also developing countries—we can look to Iceland, we can look to the Netherlands, we can look to Côte d'Ivoire—and a lot of different intergovernmental organizations that have gender in global trade as the crux of their work. The Commonwealth Secretariat, for example, has been on this agenda for at least 10 years, and now the ITC, the International Trade Centre, which is a co-agency between UNCTAD and the World Trade Organization. We can look to the OECD. We can look to the World Bank. All of these organizations have a gender in global trade agenda.
Part of our job is to think about how we can demonstrate leadership to bring some coherence to the agenda that each of these different camps is pursuing at this time. Maybe in other questions we can talk about the specific initiatives that I think we can put in place.