We do have an international strategy within the Office of the Auditor General. One tranche of that is really trying to help other jurisdictions, other legislative auditors, to advance their work. Within that strategy, it does call for us to be at a forum that is called INTOSAI. That is a natural forum where legislative auditors of different countries come together and share practices. We also have opportunities to receive visitors from other audit offices and have exchanges with them.
Another mechanism is what we call peer review. From time to time, an organization might choose to ask another jurisdiction to come and look at their audit practices, so we would go; Canada does participate. We have participated in peer reviews of the United States GAO, the U.K., and also the EU. We have been quite prominent in terms of helping other jurisdictions to see if they can gain from our audit methodology and our audit approach.
But independently from the government side, there are also financial management workshops that the Government of Canada is a sponsor of—Mr. Ralston can speak to that a bit as well—just to have an exchange of issues relating to financial reporting and financial management.
All of those are good exchanges where we can help one another out when there are issues that could be common between legislative organizations or the auditor side.