Yes, if I've understood your own questions rightly, in my contribution, I'm saying that gender-based analysis needs to contribute to the actual vision of a policy.
Certainly, if you look at a variety of gender mainstreaming, like gender budgeting, where, frequently, when a budget is mainstreamed, it just comes in at the last minute. For example, it gets plugged in and is like a social policy that is actually tackling problems created by top-line, mainstream government policy.
Did that answer your question, or do you want me to refine that in some way?