 Okay, here at BNAE community for us, people are making decisions that have both benefits to the environment and that generate incomes and livelihoods. And we're here, this is a good example right here, of both positive benefits where we're looking at some pits where a group of 22 women from the community have established an enterprise with the express purpose of creating green manure, which is put on rice fields and on gardens through a composting process. And they're using as the organic source of supply for the fermentation process, if you will, or the mulching process, an invasive species. Since 1992, about 20,000 community for us user groups have been established in the fall. Women are principle beneficiary of the rights that have gone to the forest. It turns out that women are quite often the community members who collect the non-temper forest product. The questions about rights to natural resources for women and marginalized groups are bound up with a larger movement for women's rights and the rights of others globally. And it's interesting that in a country where it's important and consequential, that in a country that remains largely rural, like Nepal, that questions of rights to resources to livelihood and income are being really debated here, arguably more than they are in the city. And what we see in rural Nepal is women stepping forward and demanding their rights to benefit from these resources, to participate in institutions, local institutions, that govern the use of these resources and to be very active not only from a livelihood sort of participation point of view, access to resources, but in the whole area, whole sphere of governance and decision making. And so this is an example of, I think, women stepping up increasingly with the support of the law and with the support of civil society to assert their rights to not only benefit but also to govern how natural resources are used.