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High Country News

High Country News

A nonprofit independent magazine of unblinking journalism that shines a light on all of the complexities of the West.

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HCN has covered the lands, wildlife and communities of the Western U.S. for more than 50 years. Get to know the West better by signing up to receive HCN’s on-the-ground reporting and investigations in your inbox.

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Arizona

The Dance to the Top of the Palm Tree, Bright Ntimba, Part I. 2021, oil on linen, 45 x 80 inches.
Posted inFebruary 2025: Immigrant Stories

Reenvisioning the image of immigration

by Chandler Fritz February 1, 2025January 31, 2025

Artist and refugee Papay Solomon juxtaposes European painting with African ancestry.

Posted inFebruary 2025: Immigrant Stories

Orcas à la mode, totally tubular sea pickles and bloodthirsty squirrels

by Tiffany Midge February 1, 2025January 31, 2025

Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.

Red mesas on the Navajo Nation can be seen in Mexican Hat, Arizona, traveling near the intersection of State Route 89 and 191 along the uranium haul route.
Posted inArticles

Uranium trucks on Arizona’s ‘Killer 89’ spark alarm in tribal communities

by Shondiin Silversmith January 31, 2025February 3, 2025

White Mesa residents say they’d be last to know about accidents despite being closest to danger.

Posted inFebruary 2025: Immigrant Stories

‘This is about power’: Indigenous immigrants face a second Trump administration

by Anna V. Smith January 21, 2025February 7, 2025

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who was banned from nine tribal reservations, will oversee policies uniquely important to Indigenous people.

Posted inIssues

‘Esto se trata de poder’: Los inmigrantes indígenas se enfrentan a una segunda administración de Trump

by Anna V. Smith January 21, 2025February 7, 2025

La gobernadora de Dakota del Sur, Kristi Noem, a quien se le prohibió la entrada a nueve reservas tribales, supervisará las políticas de importancia única para los pueblos indígenas.

Voters fill in ballots on Election Day 2024 on the campus of the University of California Santa Barbara.
Posted inJanuary 2025: The West's Most Wanted

Who voted in the 2024 election?

by Erin X. Wong January 1, 2025December 31, 2024

Many Democrats stayed home, while independents swung to the right.

The “Grandpa” saguaro at Catalina State Park in Tucson, Arizona, in 2022.
Posted inJanuary 2025: The West's Most Wanted

What an ancient saguaro can teach us

by Ruxandra Guidi January 1, 2025December 31, 2024

A ‘grandpa’ desert keystone species has seen more than you have.

The “Grandpa” saguaro at Catalina State Park in Tucson, Arizona, in 2022.
Posted inJanuary 2025: The West's Most Wanted

Lo que un antiguo saguaro puede enseñarnos

by Ruxandra Guidi January 1, 2025January 2, 2025

Un ‘abuelo’ del desierto que ha visto mucho más que tú

Posted inArticles

Our imperiled public lands

by Jonathan Thompson December 26, 2024December 26, 2024

President-elect Trump, a Republican-dominated Congress and Utah launch an all-out assault on environmental protection.

People wading in Lake Manly at Badwater Basin after a wet winter, Death Valley National Park, California.
Posted inDecember 2024: Land as Reparations

2024 was a year of wacky Western weather

by Jonathan Thompson December 1, 2024December 2, 2024

When assessing the region, not much was normal but climate change.

Posted inArticles

Key Senate and House races remain uncalled across the West

by Nick Bowlin November 8, 2024November 13, 2024

A dramatic shift by Latino voters toward Trump helped create a red wave.

Posted inArticles

President Biden to apologize for federal Indian boarding schools

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster and Kate Schimel October 24, 2024October 25, 2024

The U.S. government hopes to assuage cynicism and begin a new chapter of healing for Native people.

Posted inArticles

The future of renewables in Arizona hinges on voters

by Wyatt Myskow October 17, 2024October 16, 2024

The Arizona Corporation Commission has come under scrutiny for its continued support of fossil fuels and resistance to supporting more solar in the state. Three seats could make the difference.

Posted inArticles

Will exploratory lithium mining continue near a sacred hot spring?

by Maya L. Kapoor October 2, 2024November 7, 2024

A judge will decide the fate of Ha’Kamwe’ as the Hualapai Nation fights the drilling in court.

Posted inOctober 2024: Latino Vote

On the road with Latino organizers in the swing states of the West

by Bernardo Ruiz October 1, 2024September 30, 2024

In Nevada and Arizona, Latinos make up nearly a third of all voters. What are they thinking this election year?

LaLo Montoya, director de participación cívica de Make the Road Nevada, hace campaña con un voluntario en un barrio del lado este de Las Vegas, Nevada, el pasado marzo.
Posted inOctober 2024: Latino Vote

El voto indeciso latino

by Bernardo Ruiz October 1, 2024October 4, 2024

De gira con organizadores en Arizona y Nevada.

An unhoused woman pushes her belongings down the street in Scottsdale, Arizona. An Arizona initiative could force local governments to crack down on unhoused people or risk losing property tax revenue.
Posted inOctober 2024: Latino Vote

The downballot issues driving the West’s 2024 elections

by Jonathan Thompson October 1, 2024September 30, 2024

From climate and public lands to shifting political allegiances, the region faces critical choices at the ballot box.

Posted inArticles

Audio: What do we really learn from trail cams?

by Ruxandra Guidi September 27, 2024September 30, 2024

Documenting wildlife can bring us back to nature.

Posted inNovember 2024: The Once and Future Prairie

After half a century, the Apache trout swims off the threatened species list

by Ben Goldfarb September 12, 2024October 18, 2024

Arizona’s state fish is doing well but faces a daunting future.

The early morning sun shines through the Sonoran Desert landscape near the U.S.-Mexico border in southern Arizona. According to the International Organization for Migration, the U.S.- Mexico border is the deadliest land route for migrants in the world.
Posted inSeptember 2024: When Migrants Go Missing

The fatal flaw in the Border Patrol’s rescue program

by Tanvi Misra September 1, 2024September 5, 2024

The Missing Migrant Program is meant to prevent deaths. Instead, it may be causing them.

Posts pagination

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People brace for impacts on land, water and wildlife after feds fire thousands over holiday weekend

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