That is a big question. There is a much deeper reckoning to be had in terms of how militaries operate and how institutional hierarchies and reporting mechanisms operate. It's not a secret that we have issues with women in the military, and in Canada we have issues with the RCMP. This is not a secret anymore.
Unless we really reform our institutions, it's misguided and perhaps even a little dangerous to assume you can just add women to institutional structures as they exist, send them overseas and somehow expect a different result. That's the problem I have with it. An effort to increase women in peacekeeping operations has to go hand in hand with the efforts made by police forces, militaries and the RCMP in Canada to genuinely reform these institutions and make them more democratic and representative. That's the way forward for peacekeeping missions. It can't be something that is just addressed within peacekeeping operations; it has to address all the other institutions.