I would say so. Certainly the work in the community, in terms of safe drinking water and in terms of the plants and fauna around us, is very critical to the air we breathe. Ensuring that the beauty of the landscape and our connection to the land are part of that development is critically important.
I believe indigenous women have played a strong role—for instance, through harvesting medicines through the land—in ensuring that the land is healthy. That was traditionally the role of the women. We want to ensure that this is sustained over generations and lifetimes. If those opportunities exist, that work absolutely should be promoted.