 I was asked to comment briefly on Jakob's presentation and the paper, the draft for the outline of this report, and that's a great opportunity because the work we do at EFAT, of course, is closely related, and I was able to already interact with FAO on this report before, so I hope I can give some constructive comments. First of all, I really appreciate the very ambitious goal to bring out such a report in such a short time, and I was trying to think of what could be kind of points that you can use to really find a structure that will lead you to the goal of finding that connection between rural migration and rural development and agricultural development. So one aspect is that if we think of drivers of rural migration to think in terms of constraints and enabling factors to kind of review the evidence of what are the main constraints that keep people from engaging in migration when it could be beneficial because in many contexts we know that migration actually can improve the welfare of households but due to income constraints and credit constraints they are not able to engage in these activities, but at the same time you might find evidence of programs or other factors in the environment that can enable people to engage in migration in a more productive manner, let's say, and to follow this evidence to then look at patterns and other data that reflect these factors. So that's one suggestion. And the other one is, yeah, I mean, you stated that you're working on this but yeah, I really think that it would be very interesting to see what is the environment that these migrants live in so what are the conditions of these rural areas of the agriculture production in these areas and how do they then kind of set the scene more for those rural migrants? Where do they live? What does the agriculture economy look like in different regions in the countries and what can we then maybe conclude what that could mean for migration? And another point, just a kind of small side note of policy recommendations, on the one hand, I very much understand that you don't want to give a clear message of either pro or contra-migration policies and there is however some evidence on seasonal migration projects between countries, so especially in the kind of southeast Asian, Oceania region where countries find agreements for specific seasonal work programs and there's some research on the impacts of that so I think it could be worth to investigate what that means for those migrant workers and for the rural areas that they might leave behind but also how that might have improved the conditions at the destinations and the origins. So even though you wouldn't necessarily make a policy recommendation you can learn something about seasonal migration and how that can be shaped by the policy makers. And again, in terms of the protracted crisis I guess we all know that this is a big, big challenge to find one narrative when you have so many different types of crisis that can trigger migration or that can be caused partially by the arrival of a lot of migrants or displaced people and also there maybe if you think a little bit more about constraining factors or enabling factors so if you think of the climate change triggered migration that you think again more like what are the constraints that these people face due to the climate change or if there's a, yeah, like a political crisis what constraints are created that then either lead to more or less migration. Yeah, and I think that's... I have a few more notes I will send to you via email. Thank you.