 So just to remind us, since we talked about the themes and you know which ones the countries are, but I remind you that we're going to collect quantitative data with almost 3,500 people. So it's important to remember that this is an individual survey, not a household survey. So we're going back and forth on this. But while there are some components relative to the household, it's very much a targeted survey for individuals only. So the design process is the following as it's still very much ongoing. So the work package developed their framework and gave me some guidance. And I came up with a preliminary, very much preliminary draft, which was already very long. It was, there was some back and forth and some amendments made to this draft, but then we convened the survey design panel. So in each country, we invited a group of experts to become part of this design panel. So these were municipal actors, academics, representatives of NGOs, CSOs, and wherever possible, also representative of the displaced. So these panels have happened now in three out of four countries. Journal is actually scheduled for tomorrow. That was really interesting. So we shared the survey with all of them, invited them to provide written feedback and then convened them for a half-day workshop where we went through the tool in detail in all the different sections, you know, and discuss indicators, conceptual understandings of certain things. And also, you know, which questions could be cut, which questions we're missing when it comes to, you know, quantifying things like well-being and self-reliance. We will, by soon, I begin starting, I believe starting next week, hold survey design focus groups with displaced persons in all of these countries in urban and sometimes in camp context where we ask them, you know, when you think of self-reliance, when you think of well-being, what does that mean to you? What do you think is really crucial for getting there? So it's not just us coming with our frameworks and imposing those on these people that are in a way that is also a way for them to co-design the survey. And then we go back to the drawing board, integrate all this feedback and hopefully have a tool that translates conceptual understandings of well-being indicators for measurement, examines the building blocks of self-reliance, and yeah, it pulls all of this together in a way that will allow us to have a harmonized tool that is basically the same for all contexts. So we can draw cross-country comparisons, but also has country-specific modules, choices, and options where necessary. So taking all the input from word packages one and two, we obviously end up with a very, very big tool, right? So we're asking necessarily we need to have profiles. We ask about basic information about the respondent and their health, when we ask about the displacement journey for the displaced. Physical and natural and bodily well-being is basically surveys, if you will, on health, on housing, on assets, social capital and well-being. We look into their networks, their political integration, if you will, what they do in their free time, you know, how well are they integrated socially. The livelihoods, strategies, and economic well-being section is very large because we're not just interested in a snapshot of their livelihoods at the moment, but we'd like to understand these, you know, while also taking into account their previous skills and previous lives, lived experiences, right, how has what they've done in the past and the skills they have acquired in the past influenced their trajectory in their current place of displacement. But we don't just want to know what they do. We also want to know how that influences their well-being. How do they like it? Do they think they're being paid fairly? Can we say that they have decent work? But of course, when we look at their livelihoods strategies, we can't just look at work, right, because we also need to understand, you know, what else might input into their financial well-being, such as remittances, aid, receipt. So it's another big chapter, of course, to capture. And finally, we also want to understand now that we know them so well, right? We also want to understand what their aspirations are. Are they going to stay put or do they have intentions to re-migrate? What are their preferences between a camp and an urban setting? What do they actually know about each other? And how are these choices made? They are choices, you know, when it comes to settling in a camp or an urban environment. So, again, I'd be very happy to share with all of you the draft tool as it stands. But this is really all I wanted to say about sort of the themes we're addressing. The tool at the stand right now, we've sort of run through it. It's longer than that. It takes longer than 90 minutes. It will need to be cut. But we'll need to figure out where we can cut while still getting at these very important aspects that were just described by our colleagues. So the challenges we have, of course, if we, you know, if we think of this as aggression, but you're not outcome and independent variables, we also need to quantify somehow with that tool. We need to quantify well-being. I don't think it's been done in this context before. We, of course, need to quantify self-reliance. And then, of course, we need to tackle the issue of sampling. How do we sample them? So we want to sample 380 displaced in urban and 380 displaced in camp environments. So in camps, it should be pretty straightforward. But how do we sample them in urban environments? So I'd love to talk to the people here about how they might have achieved this in the past in a replicable fashion across different contexts. So we want to sample the first half randomly. And the second half, they will target people who have a work-related source of income. This is an order for us to actually have a sample that, you know, large enough to draw some solid conclusions on livelihoods for WorkPackage 2. So we're just trying to figure out how to do this. We were thinking of doing a satellite-based sort of random walk geographic sampling with random starting points. But that might not work if the displaced population is hidden or too rarified to find. So something we'd love to discuss with you. In terms of timelines, the survey design panels this month focus groups next month. And we're hoping to finalize the tool in late November and start piloting in Afghanistan and Kenya in December and then begin the data connection in those two countries with Jordan and Ethiopia happening in a second wave in early 2021.