A bipartisan coalition of Arizona lawmakers is working to secure water rights for some of the state's largest tribes. We’ll hear how it would solve one of the longest-running water issues for the Navajo, Hopi and more. Plus, a new Tiny Desert Concert from a local band that's inspired by heartbreak and the desert. That and more on The Show.
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Self-dubbed "murder-folk-pop" band Morphia Slow joins The Show for the latest installment of our Tiny Desert Concerts. Founder Allene Dugan talks more about the band's start and unique sound.
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The Show talked with Bailey Sincox, a Perkins-Cotsen postdoctoral fellow and lecturer at Princeton University, to talk more about the demise of paper tickets and what is lost with it.
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Andi Murphy has been tracking the Indigenous Food Sovereignty Movement for several years. That refers to, among other things, an Indigenous community’s ability to deal with issues of health and hunger by cultivating their own healthy food, and controlling how that food is produced and distributed.
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An oral historian working with the Tucson Chinese Cultural Center has been collecting stories from the descendants of the first Chinese families who found a home in Tucson.
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A bipartisan group of members from Arizona’s congressional delegation introduced legislation on Monday, before the House and Senate chambers to settle the outstanding water claims of three federally-recognized tribes. The next day, Navajo officials hosted a virtual press conference, revealing they’re in a race against time on Capitol Hill.
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2024 is the first time in decades that the Republican Party platform does not call for a national ban on abortion But Shefali Luthra, who covers reproductive rights for the 19th, says it also points toward establishing fetal personhood through the 14th Amendment.