Sure. I also sit on the legal strategy coalition on violence against indigenous women, and we just submitted a report following the recent UN review. One thing we indicated in that was that there was a study done of the number of recommendations that have already been advanced. Fifty-six reports were reviewed, and we have over 700 recommendations. It was analyzed as to how many of those recommendations have been fully implemented, and there were very few, under a handful.
I would suggest that you're correct in that we do have a significant body of recommendations that have gone unaddressed within these areas, and they do intersect quite heavily, overlapping from the experiences of missing and murdered indigenous women and targeted violence within this context of colonial gender violence. Looking to those recommendations and moving forward towards implementing them will encompass a number of the solutions that have been discussed, and they overlap with what is being recommended.
In terms of your question around what we do, well, we have 700 recommendations there and a number of violations of international law that we continue to not address. Starting that as a starting point would be a very wise decision.