That's an important question for all of us to think about. How do we ensure that the science policy nexus is something that is readily apparent on what those knowledge mobilization and knowledge-sharing pathways are to make sure that information is shared in a timely way, and also to make sure it's appropriate? There are a number of forums for doing that.
One way we do that is to meet once or twice a year with the hamlets, hunter and trapper organizations, wildlife management boards, Inuit development corporations or organizations in Nunavut and with the other equivalent indigenous organizations in Northwest Territories and Nunavut so that we can share information that we're learning, or that others in the research community are learning, with community members. I think it's important that this be normalized and done on a regular basis. We're invited to those meetings. We make sure we always have someone attending. That provides a mechanism for feedback.
Does that get up to the federal level? We need to find other mechanisms for that, but we need to be able to share things locally, regionally, at the territorial level, at the provincial level in some cases, and also with federal colleagues and with policy-makers.