-
Arizona Edition Friday is KAWC's weekly look at topics and people shaping the community, with insightful conversations and in-depth reporting from the field.
-
Annual event allows mostly Latino graduates who are the first generation in their families to attend college a chance to thank family, friends and mentors.
-
In this episode we talked about how stress can affect students life, academic development and how to manage this amount of stress.
-
As opponents to the Bureau of Land Management's new rules push back, public lands advocates are praising the agency's decision to put conservation on par with other uses, such as oil and gas extraction and development.
-
The state Court of Appeals has rebuffed efforts by lenders, debt collectors and attorneys to void a voter-approved law designed to protect Arizonans from creditors.
-
Good news on the Colorado River is rare. Its reservoirs, the two largest in the country, have shrunk to record lows. The policymakers who will decide its future are stuck at an impasse. Climate change has driven more than two decades of megadrought and strained the water supply for 40 million people across the Southwest.
-
Arizona Edition Friday is KAWC's weekly look at topics and people shaping the community, with insightful conversations and in depth reporting from the field.
-
Now the stage is for a multi-million dollar debate over whether most Arizonans are OK with allowing women to terminate a pregnancy only until the 15th week of pregnancy -- what would remain once the old statute is finally gone -- or whether they want a much more permissive statute that abortion advocates hope to convince voters to enact in November.
-
As the weather in Yuma heats up, the message is that migrants will still come despite the ungodly heat but that agents with the Air and Marine Branch and BORSTAR as well as emergency services in Mexico are on call.
-
Arizona state senators voted Wednesday to repeal the 1864 abortion law, leaving just a procedural move to send it to the governor for her anticipated signature.
-
Gov. Katie Hobbs won't let Republican lawmakers strip away the right of Attorney General Kris Mayes to sue the owners of corporate farms whose groundwater pumping dries up the wells of their neighbors.
-
House Democrats lost their privilege Tuesday of using meeting rooms after they conducted a "drag story hour,'' what Speaker Ben Toma called "radical activism to promote dangerously perverse ideology.''