So what can you do to become part of this important movement for drug policy reform and help to drive change? Firstly, find out about your own government's drug policy. What's happening in your country and how does your government deal with this issue of drugs? Do they punish people for using drugs? What are the levels of your prison population in terms of how many people are incarcerated for drug offenses? You can also find out how people who use drugs are treated. Should they need help with their drug use? It's important to find out what your government is doing on these issues. In addition, you can also find out what your government is saying at the United Nations by looking on CNDblog.org and seeing what positions they're taking and holding them accountable for the things they say in an international forum like the UN. You can also research your local actors, NGOs, civil society organizations who might be working on this issue or might be interested in working on this issue. You can look at the members of the IDPC, the International Drug Policy Consortium. We have over 170 members in 65 countries around the world and we all come together to advocate for a form of drug control policies. So you may be able to engage with your local IDPC member as well. In terms of joining the global movement, another very concrete way to do this is to join the support "Don't Punish Campaign." This is a global campaign that calls for stopping the punishment and criminalization of people who use drugs and other vulnerable people who are involved in the illicit drug market and the scale-up of health and harm reduction services. The campaign has been running since 2013 and the important moment in the support "Don't Punish Campaign" is the 26th of June every year when there is a global day of action. The 26th of June is actually the UN day against illicit drug trafficking and drug abuse. And on this day, many governments have used it as a moment to reinforce harsh messages around drugs. In fact, China has sometimes used the 26th of June as a day to execute drug traffickers. The reason that the support "Don't Punish Campaign" has a global day of action on that same day is because we want to jam the message of the 26th of June. Take it back and say "This is a day when governments need to stop and think about what harm is being caused by current policies and what needs to change." In the first year, we had 41 cities join the support "Don't Punish Campaign" in terms of doing actions as diverse as dances and talks and street art and that culminated in 2016 when there was about 160 cities around the world where people took part and had the actions on that day. So, one very concrete way for you to get involved is during the campaign and plan action for the 26th of June and join the movement. So a good way into campaigning around harm reduction and drug law reform for students is to engage in organizations like Students for Sensible Drug Policy which is a student organization focused particularly on changing the laws around drugs and also an organization called Youth rise which is an organization or the people championing harm reduction. So that can be a good way in. Some young people choose to engage directly in the drug user movements when we have very much welcoming of young people because for us as a drug user network, drug user movement, we need to encourage the next generations to come through. For example, I'm working in the UK right now with young ketamine users in a project called Ketamine Strike From the Horse's Mouth where we as older ketamine users share our knowledge with younger ketamine users to help them respond to the problems that they're facing. So I think there's ways for younger people to get involved in drug law reform and harm reduction. And there's also ways that we as drug users can reach out to our young peers and engage them in our movements. I think is such an interesting sector to work and I sometimes pinch myself because I'm fortunate to have a career in this work and really I think I would be doing it anyway. When we, if you are interested at all in social justice, I think you can't choose a more compelling area. Drug users, I would argue the most systematically and institutionally stigmatized and persecuted community in many societies. And as a society, we can get it right with drug users, perhaps there's hope for humanity after all. There's the obvious one which is the organization Students for Sensible Drug Policy. I call them sensible students for sure because they are. So that's an obvious avenue. I would encourage people to look at the input website and in particular the Vancouver Declaration. This is explains the mission I suppose for input and to become involved if they can. If they are a drug user, takeout membership application or join the local network and become involved locally also.