From Discrimination to Dominance? How Status Threat is Linked to Male Refugees' Gender Beliefs
Jan 1, 2026·
·
0 min read
Dr. Benjamin Korman
Dr. Sophie Moser

Abstract
The inflow of young male refugees into Germany in 2015 prompted increased public support for far-right groups portraying them as threatening. Applying Social Identity Theory, we argue that discrimination threatens refugees’ self-esteem by signaling their low status. To address this, male refugees recategorize their ingroup into a smaller subgroup (e.g., from refugees to male refugees) to differentiate themselves from lower-status others (e.g., female refugees), bolstering their self-esteem. We hypothesize that the more discrimination that male refugees experience, the more they will support traditional gender norms. Support for our theory comes from a sample of 1,112 youth refugees living in Germany.
Type
Publication
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies

Authors
Dr. Sophie Moser
(she/her)
Post-Doctoral Researcher
I am a Post-Doctoral Researcher at the Cluster of Excellence
“The Politics of Inequality” at the University of Konstanz. I conduct
quantitative research on workplace inequality. My work examines how gender,
age, migration background, and occupational background shape everyday work
experiences, career outcomes, and health, and what organizations and
policymakers can do to reduce these disparities.