We are always trying to look at best practices and trying to make sure that people across the country know about them so that they're not reinventing the wheel.
For example, we put success stories on our website. We've taken projects, asked why they succeeded and what they did differently, and put them up on our website so that, hopefully, somebody in Newfoundland sees what somebody in B.C. is doing and can employ the same programs.
We've also taken a list of all these projects that engage men and boys in different ways. There's the Don't be a Bystander campaign. There's the Moose Hide campaign, and there are various other programs that have been done across the country. We're trying to say that if you want to engage men and boys, go and talk to these people, wherever they are, and get lessons learned. We're trying to connect them.
As Linda was saying, for example, even in something like campus violence, where we funded these projects, we have some great data coming out. Not everybody was involved in them, so we're trying to figure out creative ways of getting people involved—not just the ones who worked on the projects, but others—so they can take some of these best practices and say that they need a simple guidance document, or this or that kind of a tool.
We're trying to do that as much as possible everywhere we can.