I could start off on that.
Page 4 of the short document on the university policies does list eight best practices for policies. I think that it's picking up on what Professor Chambers said, as well. Funding for this is important and there needs to be a lot more.
It so happens that I'm part of a seven-year project funded by SSHRC looking at issues of sexual assault on university campuses. I think a previous witness, Shaheen Shariff, is the head one. I think, if I read it correctly, that she presented to this committee before. There are some things happening, although not enough, in that kind of area. I think that's a way to help universities, which are struggling for money, to help identify on a Canada-wide basis what are some of the best practices, what's working and what's not. That's an important way to do it.
The other thing I would say on that is that there does need to be as well an ongoing dialogue with universities about this. The federal government can play a role in bringing that together. The universities and colleges association would be a prime organization in providing some education and maybe some funding, so that a body like that could deal with that. One of the characteristics of universities is they don't like being told what to do. They have this independent streak, separate from government and all those kinds of things, rightly and importantly. How you handle that is quite important. That kind of thing might be far more effective than a top-down directive. There might be ways to do that either through funding or other ways to support that kind of thing.