Two types of projects that we funded have seemed particularly promising. Those that educate youth in terms of healthy relationships work with young girls and young boys or young men and young women and set out conversations about appropriate behaviours, appropriate ways to interact, what are healthy relationships. Those seem to have had some very good results with youth. Of course, the proxies, when you're measuring, are based on self-reported changes in behaviours. So to some degree it's going to be anecdotal and there are not that many of those projects that we have funded yet. However, a number of players across the country are funding some of these interventions with youth. Some school boards in some provinces are looking at developing those types of programs as part of the regular curriculum.
Another promising avenue is what I mentioned in the opening remarks. It's the engagement of men. The White Ribbon Campaign has been acting as a catalyst for us to create a community of practice amongst some projects that we are funding that all have as a goal to engage men and boys in the reduction of violence against women and girls. Their attempt at creating a community of practice has demonstrated that there's some very significant interest in engaging in a dialogue on this front and to take men who are not perpetrators but men who are actually bystanders and have a real interest, like the vast majority of men, in seeing reductions in violence against the women in their lives, has seemed again to give some very promising results. Again, we're dealing with proxies in terms of results. The indicators, again, are self-reported rapes, self-reported changes in attitudes and behaviours, so I think we need some longer-term examination of those and maybe more projects of this nature.