Yes, absolutely.
I want to add to those statistics that roughly 51% of all human trafficking victims in Canada are indigenous women and girls. We don't necessarily have stark statistics on boys and men, because they're not overly mentioned. It's estimated that up to 25% of victims of human trafficking are boys and men. That is an area of research that Brave Education is pursuing with the help of Ena Lucia as well.
We work in human trafficking prevention education. We work in empowerment. We work in making sure everything is culturally relevant and culturally inclined. We work with communities across Canada, far and wide, in every province, territory and community, to understand what our youth are seeing with respect to what might be deemed human trafficking in terms of exploitation—especially with regard to technology and this manipulation, grooming and recruitment that we see in situations of human trafficking.
We do community consultation across Canada to build education, to understand and to change things in our curriculum to suit those communities with respect to the ever-changing crime of human trafficking.
What we see on the ground in those classrooms is absolutely horrific. There are young women and girls who go missing—especially in indigenous communities—who are suspected of having been trafficked. Many of them are from the inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls in Canada.
I cannot say enough that what we see on the ground with education is always changing. Our curriculum tries to stay as up to date as possible as things change and as we learn new things every day.