“…Recent cross-national research, particularly focused on the developing world, associates urbanization with multiple gender egalitarian outcomes (Evans, 2015). This includes greater support for gender equality among young women (Boudet, Petesch, Turk, & Thumala, 2012), less justification for violence against women (Uthman, Lawoko, & Moradi, 2009), higher rates of later female age of marriage (World Bank, 2014, p. 110), higher rates of later age of pregnancy (UNFPA, 2007, p. 28), greater access to sexual and reproductive health services (UNFPA, 2007, p. 28), less support for female genital cutting (UNICEF, 2013), higher rates of education among girls (Lloyd, 2005, p. 78), less gender bias in household spending on education (Mussa, 2013), greater participation of women in household decision-making (Head, Yount, Hennink, & Sterk, 2015), and smaller gender gaps in education (Zeng, Pang, Zhang, Medina, & Rozelle, 2014).…”