Davos gay
This week, The Partnership for Global LGBTIQ+ Equality (PGLE) launched the 2nd annual ‘Pride on the Promenade,’ a united show of support for lesbian, homosexual, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer (LGBTIQ+) people through a rainbow light-up of multiple venues and signs across the Promenade in Davos, Switzerland during the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting.
The initiative, organized by Accenture, GLAAD, HRC, and PGLE, celebrates the progress of LGBTIQ+ human rights and serves as a call to activity for necessary advances in global LGBTIQ+ acceptance and equality. PGLE is a project of BSR, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, and the Earth Economic Forum.
Venues hosted by Accenture, Amazon, Axios, Betterup, Bloomberg, Circle, Cisco, Citi, CNBC, Deloitte, EY, Female Quotient, GBBC, Google, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Hub Identity Davos Leadership Campus, IBM, Meta, Microsoft, Salesforce, SAP, and Stripe participated in ‘Pride on the Promenade’ tonight by displaying rainbows and LGBTIQ+ messages on screens and signage in exterior and interior hosted spaces
Located in the heart of Davos and close to mountain railways, shopping facilities, and other attractions is this rooms, a fitness and sauna area, 2 restaurants and a big garden luxury hotel.
The Morosani Schweizerhof is a four-star superior hotel and features both a timeless ambiance and an atmosphere of tradition and warmth. Despite its central location, the Morosani Schweizerhof provides a tranquil retreat surrounded by mountains.
For more than years the Morosani Family has been committed to the hospitality industry in Davos and convey timeless beliefs and create rooms with soul and character in which guests are invited to enjoy themselves, commemorate and simply relax.
The Art-Nouveau architecture of the hotel offers generously-proportioned, light-filled rooms and suites. They are finely detailed, spacious, welcoming, and unique. Each room in the historic building has its own alpine charm.
The Senses Spa suggestions on m2 a steam-bath, different saunas as skillfully as relaxation, fitness room and a variety of massage and regeneration treatments.
Together with the Morosani Posthotel
The World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland is underway and LGBTQ visibility is high. Last night, the heads of state, CEOs, and civic and social leaders from around the globe were greeted with the Partnership for Global LGBTIQ+ Equalitys “Pride on the Promenade, a combined show of back for LGBTQ people through a rainbow light-up of multiple venues and signs across the Promenade, the main road of shops and cafes in Davos.
The initiative organized by PGLE, Accenture, and GLAAD celebrates the progress of LGBTQ human rights and serves as a call to move for necessary advances in global LGBTQ acceptance and equality. PGLE is a proposal of BSR, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, and the Earth Economic Forum.
Accenture, AWS, Axios, , Cisco, CNBC, Deloitte, EY, Female Quotient, Google, Hub Culture, IBM, Meta, Microsoft, Salesforce, SAP, Workday, and Zoom participated in ‘Pride on the Promenade’ by demonstrating rainbows and LGBTQ messages on screens and signage in exterior and interior hosted spaces located o
At the G7, Davos, and Beyond, LGBTIQ Voices Must Be Heard
Queer communities are accustomed to marginalization. We have grown to expect that in circles of power, our issues and voices will be ignored, marginalized, or at best, tokenized. So it came as a pleasant surprise when the Group of Seven (G7), an exclusive club of the global economic heavyweights, truly centered lesbian, gay, bisexual person, transgender, intersex and queer (LGBTIQ people) in its discussions and committed to concrete actions to advance LGBTIQ inclusion and equality. As Japan assumes the G7 presidency for –and as planet leaders meet in different configurations at the World Economic Forum in Davos this week–it is essential that world powers uphold these commitments.
Each year, the G7 brings together the heads of governments and ministers of countries whose economies produce nearly half of global gross domestic income–Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the Merged States–meet to discuss common positions related to prominent global issues such as trade, conflict, climate change, and social