Yes. I think it's changing and that there's more of an openness, but there is also a sense of isolation. We're very guarded. We're not the victims' lawyers, and there's a tendency for complainants to see us as their lawyer. We have to guard against that, because it's problematic.
We try, then, to take a very isolationist approach, sometimes for good reason, but it gives us sometimes a sense that we're inaccessible. We're really busy and are not given enough incentives, if I can put it that way, to really learn about human behaviour in some problematic areas. Robbery perhaps is not an area in which we need to learn more about insight into victims and their experiences, but I think sexual assault definitely is.