To answer the first part of your question, about resources, our approach has been to try to coordinate the resources that exist within each of the seventeen departments and agencies to make sure they're used as effectively as possible, and, very importantly, to make sure we all know what each other's priorities are, and which specific challenges are being targeted so we can get maximum value from the resources we have. It's a challenge. It's one that is more than likely not going to diminish over time. It's very much related to the lack of specific hard data. You have a kind of chicken and egg situation, in which it's really difficult without the data to actually know whether you're dedicating sufficient resources to each element of the problem.
In this exercise, there are many challenges. We find that civil society is absolutely essential to addressing the problem. They have contact with the victims themselves. They are very much engaged in working with several agencies and departments to provide the solutions, to identify the victims, to assist them, and to provide protection. Also, they're key partners in providing that anecdotal evidence that is so very necessary.