 I was a great panel and I think we had a lot of complementary components to the questions of forest and climate change. I think everybody recognized that we made a lot of advances in protecting forests and recognizing the rule of forest. There are important questions about how do you maintain the economic viability of forest conservation and how you bridge, I think, commodity markets that draw on forest resources also to the benefits of the communities and populations living around forest. So it was a great panel because it was forward-looking but also recognizing that we have to overcome some of the structural issues that have limited, I think, our success not only in conserving forests but in making forests also a venue of development. I embedded that panel. There are a lot of different research questions, right, and I think some of the research questions have to do with political economy questions. So how do markets function and how do forest products and local populations enter into global markets? There are many research elements of that that we need to consider. There's another very important set of research questions related to landscapes. So how do we move from segmented view of sectors or types of government arrangements to a view of the interlinkage between governance systems and property regimes and how do we bridge the different rights that people have in terms of use resources in general. So that's another segment. There are many questions about how do we incorporate small farms in that case or forest dwellers into more active economy or sustainable economy. And there are several research questions related to that. So there are some underlying questions about social change. Those communities are changing. We don't understand how they're changing. They use in those communities are changing a lot and we still assume and when we talk about local communities and indigenous communities we still have a view and a vision of them that is quite romanticized and distant from reality. So there are a lot of that social scientists can bring. There's one underlying issue about research that I think you know I speak to everybody there that you know we leave and I mentioned my talk we leave in the spirit of accelerated changes. And most of our disciplines are not able to deal with that and to do how that transcends the domains that we've been trained to do. So a lot of the research questions they have to do with how do we think about linking local level to regional level linking sectors. How do we understand complexity and interconnectedness which our research tools are very limited to do. So it's quite an exciting agenda I think.