“…In spite of this, individual and organizational records and archives have continued to play an important part in telling the nation’s story, and while much historical content is colonial in purview and predominantly tied to the concept of “England as the motherland”, New Zealand’s colonial roots have largely ensured a culture of written record-keeping. In spite of some (still regretted) losses of archives through neglect, ignorance or accident and ongoing questions around the lack of representation of marginalised groups, such as “non-dominant cultural, gender, religious, linguistic, ethnic, political and social identity groups” (Welland and Cossham, 2019, p. 618), New Zealand holds many miles of physical archives and terabytes of digital archives to do with individuals, groups, communities and organisations. This material not only opens opportunities for different types of historical research but also provides an extensive overview of the colonialisation process and colonial thinking, the keeping, breaking and ongoing discussion around the founding document Te Tiriti o Waitangi (the Treaty of Waitangi) and the continuing efforts by Māori to retain or regain their land, culture, language and history [1].…”