I have noticed that people really love giving women advice, generally speaking. What I'm hearing from my colleagues in this room is that we want to follow that up with specific actions that they can take on their own terms. To me that is really vital. We can't have policies designed to help women when the women are not involved in designing them materially.
In that material reality, I think we need to make room for all kinds of women. Reproductive justice includes women who do not have children. It includes anybody's choice in that system to operate as they might.
I think my suggestion from my vantage point, particularly working with immigrant women, is that Canada's imagination needs to catch up to what these women bring. Canada imagines a lot of immigrant women to be really meek. They're here because they followed their husband, and they can't really communicate well. That is not my experience at all. These women are the primary applicants to come to Canada. They are choosing to come to Canada and make it their home. It is vital that we support them in doing so, because that is good for Canada's economy and for those communities.