 Very much things are still framed in terms of women as victims of climate change. And this is based on the assumption that women are the poorest of the poor, women are much more reliant on natural resources than men are, and women lack the voice and influence in decision-making process about climate change. This whole stereotyping needs to shift. And we should really focus on gender equality and women's empowerment as a goal in their own right and not because victims need to be seen. We look at the INDCs, the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions that were submitted by parties before the COP in Paris. Only 40% of those made an explicit reference to gender. The focus in Marrakech is going to be a lot on how the national processes of implementing and translating global commitments to national policy and action can be done in a gender-responsive way. We have a lot of discourses at the national level, at the global level in terms of gender. There are efforts done in the last years to integrate gender, but when you go at the look level, when you work with communities, we don't see the change. So at the end we have gender at the theoretical level, at the document level, but when we look at the vulnerability analysis, we don't see any analysis which is really based on very strong gender perspective. So the reality of women or of marginalized people is not changing yet at the local level.