Research

Publications

· Van Coppenolle, B and Smith, DM (forthcoming) ‘Dynasties in Historical Political Economy’, in Jeffery Jenkins, and Jared Rubin (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Historical Political Economy, (online edn, Oxford Academic, 18 Aug. 2022), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197618608.013.10, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

· Van Coppenolle, B (2022) ‘Political Dynasties and Bicameralism: Direct Elections and Democratisation in the Netherlands’, Electoral Studies, 76: 102454. 

· Van Coppenolle, B (2020) ‘How do Political Elites Persist? Political Selection, Political Inequality, and Empirical Historical Research’, French Politics, 18: 175-188.

· Cirone, A and Van Coppenolle, B (2019) ‘Bridging the Gap: Lottery-based Procedures in Early Parliamentarization', World Politics, 71 (1): 197-235

· Cirone, A and Van Coppenolle, B (2018) ‘Cabinets, Committees and Careers: The Causal Effect of Committee Service’, The Journal of Politics, 80 (3): 948-963

· Van Coppenolle, B (2018) ‘Remembering one's Representative: How District Magnitude and List Type affect Candidate Recognition’, Political Studies, 66 (3): 786-807

· Van Coppenolle, B (2017) ‘Political Dynasties in the UK House of Commons: The Null Effect of narrow Electoral Selection’, Legislative Studies Quarterly, 42 (3): 449-475

· Berlinski, S, Dewan, T and Van Coppenolle, B (2014) ‘Franchise Extension and the British Aristocracy’, Legislative Studies Quarterly, 39 (4): 531–558

Other Publications

Book Reviews

 · Van Coppenolle, B (2020) ‘Book review of Dynasties and Democracy: The Inherited Incumbency Advantage in Japan. By Daniel M. Smith’, The Journal of East Asian Studies, 20 (1): 123-124

Blog Posts

 · Van Coppenolle, B (2018) ‘Democratic dynasties: why are certain families successful in politics?’, British Politics and Policy at LSE, (11 Jan 2018). Blog Entry 

Working Papers

 · ‘Political Dynasties and the 2010 Belgian General Election’

· 'Unbreakable legacies? Redistricting, Political Capital and the Personal Vote', revise and resubmit The Journal of Historical Political Economy 

Work in Progress

· ‘Political Inequality in the UK 1832-1997’, with Samuel Berlinski and Torun Dewan

· ‘Inheriting Political Success’

· 'Royal Dynasties', with Sutanuka Roy and Oliver Vanden Eynde

· 'Deliberation in online citizens’ assemblies', with Dominik Duell and Anam Kuraishi