Absolutely. As I said, there's not a ton of research on the issue that we raised earlier around the social media cyberworld that young girls and women are facing. Also, the issue of campus violence is something that's fairly new and fairly—well, not new. I shouldn't say the issue is new. The focus is new, but the issue is not new, which I can say as a woman who was on campus many years ago.
Also, we talked a bit about the hypersexualization of girls in the media the last time I was here. There's this culture that we're raising our young women and girls in that demands that they look a certain way and be a certain way, and in fact they are sexualized at a very young age. Those are things that I think certainly you could focus on that would be complementary to the work, and the research that you will do will fold into the federal strategy, so it will not be redundant. We won't be calling the same level of witnesses, but what we can do is present this committee's work as the evidence around those topics.
Then, of course, is the notion of engaging boys and men. How we do that, and how do we make sure that we do that in a way that's complementary to the work?