 So our research methods are what we would call in the research world mixed methods research. We're bringing together the power of large-scale surveys as we will be collecting over 3,400 surveys across four countries in both camp and urban settings. So we'll bring the power of that type of quantitative data collection with the critical importance of participatory research methods. So we will be constituting in each of our four countries participatory forum where we bring local government with the displaced around the table to be able to not only know what evidence we're collecting but also how they can use it to further their own agenda towards integration. Now the themes that we will be looking at through our quantitative survey are themes linked directly to self-reliance, well-being, as well as livelihoods. So these are common research themes but what's unique about this survey is bringing these themes together because it's essential to understand that well-being is a part of our understanding of integration and so is self-reliance and this is very simply because well-being is part of the debate on self-reliance. Self-reliance is more of an objective measure. It's about the capacity of oneself to count on him or herself respective to others. Well-being is more of a subjective measure. It's the personal experience, the personal aspirations. So we're bringing the subjective and the objective together to make sense of what integration can mean not only for people themselves but in the context in which they live.