 The title of our talk was Methodological Challenges, and we discussed challenges facing researchers in the global south, specifically capacity, who's doing the research, what type of training they have, resources, how is it funded, and most importantly timelines, because oftentimes we're asked to create fast research in response to policy needs, and it's not necessarily the strongest research. And so we're trying to balance what policy makers need and the timelines and resources researchers need in order to produce quality work. Specific highlight from the session, actually it was everyone talking to each other because so often I think researchers feel alone when they're facing these challenges, and Dorothea Klein said something really interesting. She said that often researchers are inheriting rushed timelines because evaluation or actual research is an afterthought. So I thought that was a highlight, something to consider that we're asked to do, as she said, quick and dirty work instead of quality work. We're planning to discuss further is balancing, again, what policy makers and researchers need, and also looking at piecemeal versus ideal work, and maybe that the piecemeal is the beginning of the possibility, and finally, are there guidelines that are international and can transcend different contexts and cultures that we could provide without being top down, but being more bottom up and collaborative?