transcript of a live event and therefore may contain errors. This transcript is the joint property of CaptionsLIVE and the authorised party responsible for payment and may not be copied or used by any other party without authorisation. Page 55 together into the same room to talk about and take action around things that don't immediately and directly benefit them. Societal issues, city issues, neighbourhood issues and this got me thinking a lot about, in a literal and metaphorical sense, how do we mobilise individuals to actually roll up their sleeves and paint a wall for a purpose that's bigger than themselves and how do we, as designers, set up a program or project that people that are needed, so that people that are needed to make it into a success can step into it? How do we enable them to see how they fit into the broader ecosystem, whether it be an industry, neighbourhood, city, society or the planet? Child sexual exploitation is a network problem and it takes a network to solve for a network problem. What I am about to share is how our team at Tobias was able to support the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children Australia, acronym ICMEC Australia, to do this by bringing together online child sexual exploitation response ecosystem, so people with different tools, willingness and capabilities to work together. We did this through design, artefacts, insights, story-telling prodiscovery, codesign and our project created an awareness of how the systemic barriers are related to their individual pain points for the stakeholders, created an awareness of the interconnectivity and interdependencies between them, leading to pathways to respond to those systemic barriers. The problem of CSC is huge. Child sexual exploitation perpetrators behave like structured organisations, collaborating through criminal networks, constantly changing tactics to avoid detection, leveraging technology and outnumbering law enforcement. In 2021-2022 financial year, just over that year, the Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation, or ACCCE, received over 36,000 reports of child sexual exploitation and in that same period, the Australian