Thank you so much, Leah.
I just really wanted to quickly amplify that when we look at this, it's really about justice and human security as well. We really need to put a lens on the principles for change from the national inquiry when we look at a focus on substantive equality and on human and indigenous rights. It has to be a decolonizing approach. Wraparound services, they have to be strength-based and rooted in our indigenous ways of being, knowing and doing. They have to be holistic, and that will help strengthen us as indigenous women, girls and two-spirit and gender-diverse people with protective factors to allow us to live our lives with dignity and safety.
In addition to this, wraparound services also uphold our indigenous and human rights because as indigenous women, girls and two-spirit and gender-diverse people, when we're born we're born with a bundle of rights and, right from birth as indigenous women, our rights are not upheld. That's really critical, especially when we look at call for justice 3.4, which is for all governments to ensure indigenous communities receive immediate and necessary resources, including funding and support for the establishment of sustainable, permanent, no-barrier, preventative, accessible and holistic wraparound services.
In addition to this, I also wanted to quickly highlight call for justice 3.1. It calls upon all governments to ensure the rights to health and wellness of indigenous people and specifically that indigenous women and girls are recognized and protected on an equitable basis.
We also look at the importance of creating pathways for human security. If we do that, we will be really focusing on what wraparound supports look like from our lens and ensuring that we see ourselves in those wraparound supports, that we feel connected, that we feel like we belong and that these supports are meeting our needs from a cultural lens. Often the supports and services that are out there are not meeting our needs, and often they're really deeply embedded with systemic and structural racism. When we're vulnerable, we're seeking safety, but we continue to experience violence because of the systemic and structural racism.