Again, it's really difficult to answer that question because the root causes are so varied. It's impossible to compare housing, shelters, economic development. Some of the large initiatives that have to be undertaken...even the family violence programming, which I'm sure my colleagues at Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada will expand on.
The one thing, again, that I suppose we would emphasize is that the community has the best mechanisms and the best ideas for change. This is why the Government of Canada worked with the Aboriginal Research Institute to gather the promising practices in the compendium.
There are significant problems with evaluation in the area of aboriginal programming. In many instances the programs are small; they're in small communities. To do an evaluation without identifying individuals is almost impossible. So there have been barriers to declaring something to be a best practice, because to be a best practice, it has to be fully evaluated. At this time, only two major programs in Canada have been fully evaluated, the Hollow Water program and the Rankin Inlet spousal abuse counselling program. The idea of promising practices comes out of a response to that frustration, that there are a lot of very interesting and very qualitatively successful programs in communities that can be built on and possibly adapted for other communities facing similar problems. The compendium is an attempt to bring together the first 140 of those programs, so communities have somewhere to start.