Overarchingly, it is the result of endemic and systemic racism, attitudinal and behavioural, that is then acted out in what a survivor experiences when they attempt to access services. It's also the way in which services are created and delivered.
This is not to disparage our incredible workers all across these lands, who are under-resourced and undersupported. It is a recognition that we are talking about historic inequities that exist.
We want to redress that. We want to disrupt that and to shift it by centring an anti-racist approach, which is to really understand these behavioural and attitudinal challenges.
It's also with respect to how we think about violence in general. That means we have to think about policing and about child protection and child welfare and the health system, which are all, of course, infused with the same inequities and racist attitudes and practices.
It's an ongoing piece of work, which I think is laid out in some ways through the national action plan on missing and murdered indigenous women in terms of those pieces. It's also described and laid out very well through the road map to a national action plan, which I understand the committee has.