1. Public information provision about policy intentions: The Dutch and Belgian experience;Gelders;Government Information Quarterly,2005
2. In CNAP, several kinds of actors such as Members of Parliament, pressure groups, media,… are or can be involved. However, we focus on CNAP coming from a Minister of the Government about parliamentary not yet adopted policies. This kind of communication is to be considered the most controversial. The recent Dutch Advisory Committee on the Future of Government Communication,17 also called the Wallage Committee, gives a strong interpretation of the guidelines with regard to informing the public about policy intentions. The Wallage Committee states that “the citizen has the right to know the content of the government's intentions and its motives as well. The citizen gets a lot of contrary information via news and paid information by the critics of the government's policy. So, it is absolutely reasonable that the government can also use all the information channels in the formulation stage of policy making.”
3. Impact: How the press affects federal policymaking;Linsky,1986
4. Political marketing: Lessons for political science;Scammell;Political Studies,1999
5. BOR: Bereikbaarheidsoffensief of Rekeningrijden? De Slag om het Bereikbaarheidsoffensief en het Rekeningrijden [Toll roads in the Netherlands: the influence of the printed press on the public support];Kranendonk,2003