 The plan on the page is an attempt by the Australian Civil Military Centre to capture the who, why, what, where and how of the business we're in. We serve Australian government stakeholders and we work very closely with a range of international counterparts and colleagues. And there's really an opportunity here to explain how we do advocacy, support training, promote lessons learned within government, look at how we provide advice to government and overall how we conduct support for all of the organisations that we're in. We are effectively a service provider and the plan on the page provides us with an opportunity to communicate to those who we work with and who we support and how we do this, who we are and how we're going to assist them to achieve better civil military police coordination in the future. The Australian Civil Military Centre is administered by the Australian Defence Department. We're given by a board of our six main stakeholders and this board in 2014 signed a charter which we still have at the centre, which establishes our priorities and determines our work streams. And the agencies that are our six main stakeholders are the Attorney-General's Department of Australia, the Australian Council for International Development, which is the peak body for the Australian NGO community, Australian Federal Police, clearly Australian Defence, the New Zealand Government and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade here in Australia. One of the huge strengths of the Australian Civil Military Centre is the diversity in thought and people that we have there. Unlike the military or the police or other career organisations, everyone's come to the centre via a different path and we have everything from a colonel in the Army through to a NGO representative and everything in between. So the diversity of thought we have there is impressive and enables us to apply a lot of different lenses and perspectives to a lot of different issues.