1. Allen, M. W. (1991). New Zealand archaeology and an active Maori involvement. Anthropology UCLA, 18, 70–82.
2. Allen, M. W. (1994). Warfare and economic power in simple chiefdoms: The development of fortified villages and polities in mid-Hawke’s Bay, New Zealand. Unpublished PhD. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, UCLA, University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.
3. Allen, M. W. (1996). Pathways to economic power in Maori chiefdoms: Ecology and warfare in prehistoric Hawke’s Bay. Research in Economic Anthropology, 17, 171–225.
4. Allen, M. W. (2006). Transformations in Maori warfare: Toa, pa, and pu. In E. N. Arkush & M. W. Allen (Eds.), The archaeology of warfare: Prehistories of raiding and conquest (pp. 184–213). Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
5. Allen, M. W. (2008). Hillforts and the cycling of Maori chiefdoms: Do good fences make good neighbors? In J. A. Railey & R. M. Reycraft (Eds.), Global perspectives on the collapse of complex systems (pp. 65–81). Albuquerque: Maxwell Museum of Anthropology (Anthropological Papers No. 8).