I can start, and then I'll pass it over to Adam.
A study that I'm sure you're all familiar with is the At Home/Chez Soi study, which looked at housing and homelessness but also had a focus on mental health issues. That's something we've been looking at in some detail in the context of a social impact bond feasibility study.
Now, I think an intervention in that area is not overtly about crime prevention, but if you tackle some of these problems at that inception point, if you will, the impacts clearly will be much greater than if you wait for the crime to happen and then start worrying about it.
I think that's one area where there's real potential. The evidence that came out of the At Home/Chez Soi study was really strong. It provided us with enough data to start looking at the benefits of the intervention in terms of its impact on the people involved and the communities they live in, and also the cost savings to government from those types of interventions.
We're seeing that there is certainly room for a social impact bond to be considered in that space. I think that would have a lot of really positive impacts, including in the reduction of crime, but also in the areas of health and labour force attachment, for instance.
Adam could speak to that in more detail.