![]() It does so by advancing, testing, and applying improved measures of international inequality. To support monitoring progress towards the SDGs, this paper aims to (1) improve measures of international inequality in terms of basic technologies and infrastructure services associated with the SDGs by explicitly taking into account non-access and (2) to estimate the international inequality of selected SDG technologies and infrastructure services. At the same time, the SDGs, foremost SDG 10 on reducing inequalities within and among countries, promote a more equitable world, both in terms of inter- as well as intra-national equality. Several of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) deal with providing access to technologies and service infrastructures to the share of global population so far excluded. This study is different to others because it highlights the power of banks' social networks to trigger important gender and economic development themes in a highly conservative society it also contributes to the literature by analysing and interpreting shared content from three extensive outlooks, which yield ample details and draw implications for banks' management and social media policy makers and regulators.Īccess to technologies, infrastructures and their related services are essential for raising global living standards and human well-being. However, the second and third results imply a gender gap in financial inclusion due to women still lagging behind. It was also determined that banks use social media to raise social and economic themes that support women in the region. Third, women are found to be more socially and emotionally involved than men who show a relatively higher interest in banks' financial services and products. Second, both flows of utterances from 'User to Banks' or 'Banks to Users' demonstrate that the highest ratios of the shared content are more closely associated with financial inclusion dimensions than aspects of users' empowerment. The study reveals these key results: first, the use of social media in banks entails twofold empowerment dimensions that are mutually beneficial for Users and Banks. From five leading banks in five Arab countries, 100 users of the banks' social media site were selected their interactive utterances were classified, analysed and interpreted. It is these histories that truly help to put a human face on LGBTQ history.This study aims to classify and interpret the interacted communications between banks and users on social media and understand the role of these digital platforms to enhance the empowerment of women and their financial inclusion in banks in Arab countries. ![]() ![]() Other accounts detail lives well-lived, unhindered by archaic social mores, offering inspiration and a source of pride for future generations. ![]() Others describe the hardships of growing up gay and in the closet, or the difficulties involved in coming out to one's family and friends. Some describe life in a community that was less than tolerant of homosexual lifestyles. One of the fascinating aspects of the archive is the availability of materials such as oral history transcripts, diaries, and letters that provide a deeply personal and human interpretation of the LGBTQ experience. Part II provides coverage of these groups, including LG student groups, Two-Spirit people, the Jewish LGBTQ community, LG Christian groups, and bisexual, transvestite, and transgender communities. The archive also contains personal correspondence and interviews with numerous LGBTQ individuals, among others.Įven within the LGBTQ community though, some groups have not been as well represented, or received as much of the limelight, as the more "mainstream" lesbians and gays. Historical records of political and social organizations founded by LGBTQ individuals are featured, as well as publications by and for lesbians and gays, and extensive coverage of governmental responses to the AIDS crisis. Part I of the archive illuminates the experiences not just of the LGBTQ community as a whole, but of individuals of different races, ethnicities, ages, religions, political orientations, and geographical locations that constitute this community.
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