Exactly.
It could be funding. Again, I think we need some graduate students. As I say, there are no economists I know of who look at the Arctic. There are very few political scientists, like me, who look at the political economy. We need to build some of that capacity, even statistical analysis—things that are left to the territories themselves right now.
I would also say engineering. Again, it gets very little. I don't think there are lots of engineers who have been to the Canadian Arctic. I find that the ability to develop new technologies that serve the very distinct needs of remote communities are not going to be developed by people who have never been there. We need to bring together that collaboration of the communities and the engineers to figure out what actually works in those communities and what technical challenges they have. I think we are still doing 20th-century technologies, poorly, in the Arctic.
That's economic development and engineering. I had a third one in mind.
You mentioned foreign policy. We tend to focus on defence. We focus on legal aspects, I think, but our foreign policy has been getting weaker. For the Arctic region as a whole, there is less attention paid to foreign policy.