Thanks very much for that question.
Yes, I absolutely agree that there needs to be judicial education around coercive control. I would say that we should be educating lawyers about coercive control as well, because one of the issues right now is that lawyers don't screen for domestic violence in family law cases, and if their client has been subject to coercive control, that can completely affect the way the family law matter unfolds.
I think there needs to be—even starting in law schools—education around coercive control. There also needs to be training for police and Crown prosecutors and, to go back to what I said in my opening statement, there needs to be policies so that the police and the Crown are appropriately applying whatever law comes out of these consultations.