Dalziel, R. (1968). Sir Julius Vogel. Wellington: Reed.[7]
Dalziel, R. (1975). The origins of New Zealand diplomacy: The Agent-General in London, 1870–1905. Wellington: Price Milburn for Victoria University Press.[8]
Sinclair, K., & Dalziel, R. (2000). A history of New Zealand. Auckland. Penguin.[9]
Articles
Dalziel, R. (1 January 1977). The colonial helpmeet: Women's role and the vote in nineteenth-century New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of History, 112–122.[10]
Dalziel, R. (1 January 1994). Review article on publications marking the centenary of women's suffrage in New Zealand. Australian Feminist Studies, 19, 191–197.[11]
Dalziel, R. (18 December 2014). A Blighted Fame: George S. Evans 1802–1868, A Life. The Journal of New Zealand Studies, 18.[12]
Dalziel, R. (1 January 2017). The Privileged Crime: Policing and Prosecuting Bigamy in Nineteenth-Century New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of History, 51, 2, 1–25.[13]
Dalziel, R. (1986). Education was the key. In Clark, Margaret (ed). Beyond Expectations: fourteen New Zealand women write about their lives. Allen & Unwin. p. 125–142.[14]
^Dalziel, Raewyn (1968). Sir Julius Vogel. Wellington: Reed. OCLC868303107.
^Dalziel, Raewyn (1975). The origins of New Zealand diplomacy: the Agent-General in London, 1870–1905. Wellington: Price Milburn for Victoria University Press. ISBN978-0-7055-0550-5. OCLC2543356.
^Dalziel, Raewyn (1977). "The colonial helpmeet: women's role and the vote in nineteenth-century New Zealand". New Zealand Journal of History: 112–122. ISSN0028-8322. OCLC936871034.
^Dalziel, Raewyn (2017). "The Privileged Crime: Policing and Prosecuting Bigamy in Nineteenth-Century New Zealand". New Zealand Journal of History. 51 (2): 1–25. ISSN0028-8322. OCLC7248767776.
^Clark, Margaret (1986). Beyond expectations: fourteen New Zealand women write about their lives. Wellington, N.Z: Allen & Unwin/Port Nicholson Press. pp. 125–142. ISBN978-0-86861-650-6. OCLC1103883342.