Yes, there's quite a bit. In any of the legislative drafting and reform to the Criminal Code and programs, there's a fair bit of consideration that goes into discussing the gender-based aspects of it. A lot of it is by virtue of the work done by policy analysts, who are usually content-specific people. Many of them have a really deep experience of the work and understand the gender aspects of any sort of issue, whether it's prostitution or some of the other projects I had mentioned with regard to women in the north. These are the sorts of projects that often have a fairly strong gender element to them and a lot of discussion. I think it's just one of the aspects of going through the common policy considerations that I mentioned in terms of that lens.
Gender is one lens among about 12 lenses. That's the only thing I would state. It is one aspect. Then there's the north, and then there's the matter of ethics, and then there are a few other lenses. There are multiple lenses that have to be considered, and they often are. I would say that a lot of the folks who are doing that kind of work are really steeped in it. It gets done, but the problem is that how they are doing it has to be conveyed or expressed so that everyone understands how they're doing it. That's perhaps where the challenge comes in.