That's a huge question. I don't think I can answer it right away in 40 seconds.
It would have to be a multipronged approach, examining what the street economy is, how much money is going to the street economy and how we put money equivalent to what's going to the street economy into a legal economy, so that individuals aren't moving from one place to what some scholars—Venkatesh and Levitt—have called “McJobs”. They're not at this low-level place, but they're actually.... How do we equate this? That's sort of [Technical difficulty—Editor] losing and replacing it with that, so it has to focus on that.
It needs to engage in the idea of reshaping street code and street culture, and building healthy relationships within the communities.
It has to focus on addictions. Again, it's addictions, not just substance use, which is a by-product of the violence and trauma within the streets. It needs to focus on addictions to power and everything else at the same time. It's the behavioural addictions that need to go on.
When we look at violence and guns and everything else, we need to find ways to slow down the trafficking and movement of illegal firearms, and how that works.
I'm not 100% sure within this short amount of time for my question. It is a bigger question.