Sure. I'll take a stab at this first.
Before I get into what we are doing with the limited resources that we have as organizations and advocates in this area, I will say that I think when we're talking about how well, as a society, we're dealing with sexual violence, we have a tendency to look at conviction rates and reporting rates as indicia of whether or not we're doing a good job. I really hope that one message I can convey here today—and that we do try to convey—which is grounded in community and in the experiences that we've heard survivors share, is that looking at conviction rates doesn't accurately reflect how well we are dealing with sexual violence.
I would like for us to more consistently look at how survivors feel about the accountability they're able to obtain and the healing they are able to engage in when they've experienced sexual violence, and use that as a metric for how well we're doing, offering a wide array of options for survivors to choose from about the path to justice, accountability, and healing and support that looks right for them.
To address the question of what more we can do, again, I run a non-profit. I know that Ms. Khan operates in similar spaces. We certainly do the best we can with the resources that we have to reach as many people as possible. Part of what we did—actually working with Ms. Khan—after these decisions came out was to deliberately go to spaces where young people, in particular, were interacting: Instagram and TikTok in some cases. We were trying to share information as a trusted resource—and I believe we, as LEAF, are that, given our history of 37 years of advocacy in this space for the legal rights of women, girls and now trans and non-binary people as well.
We try to reach as many people as we can in the spaces where they are, and I think that's an important and fundamental aspect of the work that Ms. Khan does as well, which I would invite her to speak about.