Certainly, our vision is of women and girls in the community, contributing and being supported within the community. It's obviously not something we're likely to see happen, but it's something that we work towards. One of our basic principles is, if at all possible, particularly where it's safe for the community and safe for the individuals involved, that women be kept in the community, whether it's on conditional sentences, punitive probation, or those sorts of things. We think the cost—the overall social and human costs, as well as the fiscal costs of jailing predominantly non-violent individuals who are going to rejoin the community at some point—is better served by having resources in the community.
That coalition was actually developed at a time when we started to see the global development of more marginalized women ending up being criminalized rather than getting the support of social services. It's really about focusing in that direction.