 But the fundamental challenges that we had was we have an international system that is designed on respect for sovereignty of state and principles of non-interference. And yet we were dealing with conflicts that were increasingly civil wars and internal conflicts, which meant that that international system was limited in how it could engage. And so the question for me was who responds? Who were the first people to address the humanitarian crisis, to stand up and try and stop the violence, to take action in some sort of ways? And it was as I looked across the room and in the dialogues that we have been having with my colleagues, it was that women are doing it. And they've always been central to war and peace. It's just that they've always been taken for granted. And they've always been the invisible forces and voices because we don't think of them as a unit of analysis, either in terms of, you know, maybe victimhood, but definitely not as agents of change. And that was the moment where we said, given how global this is and given, and as Rita said this, I mean, the reason why this agenda continues to be relevant is because there's a universality of experience.