I would probably start by saying that we would follow the guidelines that we were given and that we agreed to. We would implement that.
A lot of things, as you would guess, within the social sciences and humanities would not come close to some of the screening being suggested, in terms of organizations that would cause concern, particularly in the private sector. However, all our projects and applications—as with all the agencies—originate with Canadian researchers. They are always the primary applicants. They go through rigorous peer-review committees and external reviews. That's number one. If there are flags, they may be identified in the peer-review process. Whether or not we could do anything about it at that point is interesting, because there may not be any mechanism to act.
I would say that, at the other end of the scale, researchers conduct research to publish. Once the work is finished, they're writing articles and publishing them in journals that are also peer-reviewed. If there was something to cause some concern among peer reviewers, it would be exposed in the peer-review process. That would ultimately, potentially, result in the rejection of an article.
It's an interesting question. I think this is going to come up more and more.