 The business of helping communities, helping countries promote good governance is tough and challenging. Without at least minimum levels of good governance, it's so hard to sustain any gains in health education and social welfare. If you look at countries where progress has been slow, where the international community has come together, but we're not seeing the kind of positive outcomes that we've hoped for, it's almost always rooted in problems around good governance, or should we say the lack thereof. We know in places that you can promote economic opportunity, but as an NGO, you can only do it at the margins. That's why it's so important to be involved in collaborative partnerships in order to reach scale, in order to have real, real impact. And then another challenge associated with that is that where you can succeed with promoting economic opportunity, you often have rising inequality. And again, you can't solve that without major interventions in terms of public policy. There are limits to what NGOs can do, but I think what NGOs where we're most powerful is either advocating for major public policy changes or working with social entrepreneurs to leverage the power of technology, the power of innovation in terms of bringing new solutions to the tough challenges that we face. My hopes for civil society is that we get the prophetic part of our mission right, balanced with the practical part of our mission. And the prophetic part, I'll just quote an old saying, is that I think many of us started doing this kind of work. You want to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable, afflict in a moral sense, right, to prompt people to do the right thing. I think it's very important that civil society not lose that part of its mission. At the same time, I think there's the practical recognition that to bring about change, real change, particularly the challenges that we face as a global community today, ending absolute poverty, dealing with inequality, addressing challenges of climate change, food insecurity, creating opportunities for young people around the world. We're only going to address those challenges in partnerships. And again, by working with government, working with markets in the private sector and harnessing the energy of civil society and of communities. And so that's my hope, that we can combine in a powerful way the prophetic part of civil society's mission with the very practical can do with specific impact.