This document summarizes a presentation on how international migration from Bangladesh to the Middle East influences gender inequality through social remittances. It finds that male migrants experience conservative Islamic norms that encourage women to behave as "good Muslim women" by limiting mobility and access to resources. Upon returning, men transmit these norms through social remittances, reproducing patriarchal gender roles and inequality despite women's increased economic contributions through migration. While migration provides income, it may undermine women's empowerment by overlooking how cultural norms interact with economic factors to maintain women's subordination.