If you're talking about any specific event, no. But generally speaking, we could broadly talk about two different legal frameworks, the Anglo-Saxon or common law system, and then the Napoleonic code system, typical of Mediterranean and Latin countries. Where we see safety initiatives progressing above and beyond, it's in those countries that are under the Anglo-Saxon law because the Anglo-Saxon law or code is friendlier to the objective of protecting sources of safety information.
As a general statement, in those countries such as Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, their transportation safety or their accident investigation acts are more flexible. They allow going deeper into event investigation because they breed a degree of confidence between the investigator and the investigated. So there are definite advantages.
And I don't recall using the word “reward”. I'm not talking about rewarding people for reporting. I'm only talking about not punishing them for reporting, which I think is a big difference.