A recent study found that athletic appearance was associated with young Afghan refugee men being more likely to form romantic relationships with women who had higher educational or legal status in Germany. This finding suggests that physical characteristics may serve as exchangeable assets for new arrivals as they navigate legal and social insecurities in their new societies. The study was published in the Journal of Wedding and Family.
In 2015 and 2016, Germany experienced a large influx of asylum seekers from the Middle East and Central Asia. Due to the dangerous nature of the migration routes, many of these arrivals were young, unmarried men who were traveling alone. This demographic shift has resulted in skewed male-to-female ratios within certain ethnic communities within the country. Such an imbalance can make it difficult for young men to find romantic partners who share their exact cultural background.
Lead researcher Irena Kogan, a sociologist at the University of Mannheim, teamed up with colleagues Jana Kuehleman and Laura Marie Schmidt to investigate how physical attractiveness relates to the romantic lives of these newcomers. People typically pair up with partners from similar backgrounds, a process sociologists call assortative mating. However, a person may cross these typical boundaries when pursuing highly desirable traits such as physical beauty. This sociological concept, known as social exchange theory, proposes that individuals engage in romantic relationships that maximize their social or personal benefits.
In reality, people may trade highly valued traits they possess for highly valued traits possessed by their partner. Over the past few decades, researchers have routinely applied this framework to understand interracial and interethnic marriage in the United States. Many of those older studies focused primarily on female respondents. They often documented scenarios in which women appeared to trade physical beauty for the financial security or higher class status of their male partners.
Kogan and her team wanted to see if similar trends existed among male refugees in Europe. For individuals navigating the complex immigration system, finding a partner with secure citizenship or higher education can have immense legal and financial benefits. Refugees often arrive with limited formal training, unrecognized educational qualifications, and language barriers. These hurdles make it extremely difficult to enter the labor market.
Finding a partner who already has citizenship or higher education can provide a foundation of financial security and institutional knowledge. Despite these significant risks, male refugees have been largely ignored in research on relational status exchange. To fill this gap, the research team analyzed data from a large study focused on partnership formation among young male immigrants. Their sample included 1,742 unmarried men from Syria and Afghanistan who arrived in Germany between 2014 and 2018.
To create a representative sample, researchers contacted a group of randomly selected addresses from municipal registers in 14 different federal states. Data regarding physical appearance were collected during subsequent interviews. Depending on the survey format, interviewers rated the men, or the men rated themselves, on a scale of 1 to 7 across three specific dimensions. These dimensions include overall attractiveness, physical appearance, athleticism, etc.
The researchers then looked at the men’s past and current romantic relationships since arriving in Germany. They specifically checked whether these partnerships involved women who were more highly educated than men, or whether they involved women with German nationality. To ensure the statistical model was sound, the researchers used an approach known as multiverse analysis.
Multiverse analysis involves running different mathematical models using different combinations of control variables. This ensures that the study results are not simply the result of one particular analytical choice. The team controlled for a variety of factors, including the men’s religious beliefs, mental health, monthly income, personality traits, and age difference between the partners. They also mathematically adjusted the data to account for men who did not report being in a romantic relationship in Germany.
Overall, the data showed that being well groomed was not statistically significant in predicting either relationship outcome. However, the presence of athlete physique showed a consistent pattern. High athletic ability was positively associated with a man’s likelihood of dating a woman of German nationality. It was also associated with an increased likelihood of partnering with a woman who had completed higher education.
These results were highly stratified according to the men’s country of origin. For Afghan refugees, athletic appearance was strongly associated with a high-status partner. For Syrian refugees, there was no similar association.
The authors attribute this difference to the contrasting legal realities the two groups faced upon arrival. Syrian refugees generally experienced much faster asylum procedures and a relatively smooth route to securing protected status in Germany. Once granted that status, they could work without restrictions and had access to language programs.
In contrast, Afghan refugees often spent years in legal limbo with precarious residence permits. Their access to employment and state-sponsored training programs was severely restricted. Afghan men lived with greater legal and social instability, so the potential benefits of dating a German national were relatively high. A partner’s citizenship and educational background can make a big difference in a migrant’s ability to remain safely in the country, potentially intensifying the dynamics of relational interactions.
The data also showed that these appearance-based interactions were more prevalent in non-marital and past relationships than in current marriages. This suggests that physical attractiveness may be primarily related to success in the early stages of dating. If the relationship moves into a long-term marriage, other factors such as financial stability and cultural compatibility may play a more dominant role.
The researchers found that their approach had several limitations. Because the survey did not directly ask about the physical attractiveness of men’s female partners, the researchers were unable to fully measure both aspects of the aesthetic interaction. They had to rely on surrogate measures such as a woman’s age, body mass index, and standard medical calculations based on height and weight.
The authors also emphasized that observational survey data cannot completely separate cause and effect. Other underlying characteristics can easily influence the results. For example, men who are more athletic may be more self-confident, and their psychological characteristics naturally make them closer to people and easier to form new relationships. Also, these men’s physical health and fitness habits may place them in social environments where they are more likely to encounter local residents.
Because the data were obtained at a single point in time, only a snapshot of these interpersonal dynamics is captured. To build on this foundation, future studies could follow couples over several years to see exactly how initial attraction transitions into lasting social integration. The authors hope their study will prompt deeper consideration of how non-traditional resources shape immigrant experiences.
By demonstrating that physical characteristics are correlated with higher status partnerships, this study highlights the invisible resources within vulnerable populations. A strong physique can serve as a tool to overcome institutional barriers. This research reveals how individual characteristics can shape social trajectories and inclusion in new host societies.
The study, “Attractiveness for status? The association between physical attractiveness and romantic relationships among male refugees in Germany,” was authored by Irena Kogan, Jana Kuehlemann, and Laura Marie Schmidt.

