A global group of arid cities is trying to figure out how to deal with some of their shared challenges. Could Phoenix at some point join that group? Plus, the humanity that emerged when Japanese prisoners were sent to the Gila River Indian Reservation.
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As the Trump administration ramps up deportations nationwide, a Phoenix woman who has lived in the U.S. for nearly 30 years was set to be quickly deported — and probably would have been if her lawyers hadn’t stepped in.
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The debate over the role of artifical intelligence security tools in schools took a strange turn recently at Marana High School in Tucson.
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Five small, local Arizona newspapers closed without warning last week, an abrupt ending for some that have been around since before Arizona was a state.
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Francis Stewart/National Archives and Records Administration, Ctrl. #: NWDNS-210-G-D692, NARA ARC #: 538649, WRADuring World War II, when Japanese Americans were relocated to internment camps, some of them came to Arizona — to another place where the U.S. government had “relocated” a group of people: the Gila River Indian Reservation. -
A coalition of cities is aiming to share information and best practices about dealing with issues like drought, dust storms and water use and management. The Arid Cities Network is based in Doha, Qatar, and as Anthony Flint explains, there are plenty of cities across the globe that could benefit from it.
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BBC’s Pete Ross in London joined The Show to look at some of the key global stories in the coming days.