Yes. The Nathanson Centre gets its name from the man who actually gave the endowment. It's located at Osgoode Hall Law School. I am not a lawyer; I'm a criminologist.
The notion behind the Nathanson Centre was the idea that in Canada there should be a community of academics looking at organized crime and corruption. Right now I'm on sabbatical and there's a new director, and in fact the title of the centre has been broadened so that in fact most accurately it is the Nathanson Centre on Transnational Human Rights, Crime and Security. It includes a broader range of topics than just organized crime. It was founded in 1996, and I was the director for those ten years, right up until June of this year. It is the idea of trying to get empirical research looking at not only the substantive issues of organized crime itself, but to really look critically at what we're trying to do in terms of things like this topic right here, legislation where the rhetoric supports all of the positive things it's going to do, and yet when you actually look at the activity itself, there is very often a disjunction.