It is true that Sweden has a more comprehensive approach than other countries, mainly because our focus on this started 10 years before the other two countries in Scandinavia that have done it. But if you look at other countries in Europe that are now considering having a similar system, which is actually not a criminalization system because women are not criminalized, and that's key to us, but the perpetrators are, and so they should be....
If you look at the French bill that is now pending in the senate, and this is a bigger country than Canada with a lot of social problems and financial and economic budgetary difficulties that are, I would argue, bigger than here, they have still decided that they're going to pass legislation very similar to ours with social measures, etc.
I think the model is applicable everywhere, but as I said in the response to one of your colleagues, it is necessary to make the implementation of such a model a political priority. That political priority should, as you rightly pointed out, also include measures that ensure that victims have access to viable exit programs, but also long term.