It's a very broad question, and I would hesitate to answer it. I suspect that there are many other people in Canada much better able to answer that than I.
I would simply repeat some of what I said earlier. We know that the more you can reconnect people with healthy structures, and the more we can do things to retain the health and integrity of communities, the lower the measures of community ill health. Offending, drug and alcohol misuse, and mental health problems, which are all good measures of community ill health, will be reduced.
I would take a community development answer to that in terms of the aboriginal communities as a whole. Where you have well-developed communities and healthy community structures, use those as the contextual basis upon which we deliver care and support to people. And reconnect people with healthy structures upon release. We need to enhance and celebrate those aspects of cultural identity and origin actively in terms of what we do, rather than have a one-size-fits-all approach.