There are a number of ways. As your chair indicated, there are some constitutional challenges because this is, first of all, education, and even the criminal aspect is kind of more prevention, which is kind of section 92.14 as opposed to section 91.27 of the Constitution, but I don't think it's insurmountable. One of the things is just to focus on your constitutional platform. There is quite a lot in international guarantees about violence against women and protecting women against violence as a kind of basic human right, as it should be seen, and there is certainly a federal role in promoting our international obligations. That's one vehicle to use.
The other is maybe a little shakier territory. As a former university president and somebody who's been involved in this for a long time, universities mostly want to try to do a better job of this, and often it's money that is the problem. There could be targeted money to deal with the very significant problem, and there is lots of evidence of how significant it is, of sexual assault on university campuses. If this is seen as a significant problem, and it clearly is, then maybe there should be some targeted money available to universities. I know there is debate about that too, money with strings attached, but money is money, so that is still another vehicle you could use.