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ContributorsSoleri, Paolo, 1919-2013 (Architect) / Pintar, Ivan (Photographer)
Created1972-08
Description

Photograph showing buildings under construction at Arcosanti

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ContributorsSoleri, Paolo, 1919-2013 (Architect) / Pintar, Ivan (Photographer)
Created1972-10
Description

Photograph showing buildings under construction at Arcosanti

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ContributorsSoleri, Paolo, 1919-2013 (Architect) / Pintar, Ivan (Photographer)
Created1972-10
Description

Panorama view of Arcosanti site showing buildings under construction

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ContributorsSoleri, Paolo, 1919-2013 (Architect) / Pintar, Ivan (Photographer)
Created1972-08
Description

Panorama view of Arcosanti site showing buildings under construction

ContributorsDe Takacs, André C. (Composer, Lyricist) / Jerome H. Remick & Co. (Publisher)
Created1907
ContributorsThompson, Gordon V. (Composer, Lyricist) / Davis, William (Composer) / Leo Feist, Inc. (Publisher)
Created1917
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ContributorsSoleri, Paolo, 1919-2013 (Artist) / Pintar, Ivan (Photographer)
Created1972-10
Description

Photograph of plaster molds used during the ceramic bell-making process at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona

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ContributorsSoleri, Paolo, 1919-2013 (Artist) / Pintar, Ivan (Photographer)
Created1972-10
Description

Photograph of a lost styrofoam casting at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona

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ContributorsDaughtery, David (Contributor) / Garcia, Joseph (Contributor) / Morrison Institute of Public Policy (Contributor)
Created2018-06-01
Description

While many potential voters care deeply about local and state issues, 45 percent of Arizona citizens of voting-age population did not vote in the last election, according to a report by Morrison Institute for Public Policy. To address this voter crisis, Arizona Clean Elections commissioned this report, the first in

While many potential voters care deeply about local and state issues, 45 percent of Arizona citizens of voting-age population did not vote in the last election, according to a report by Morrison Institute for Public Policy. To address this voter crisis, Arizona Clean Elections commissioned this report, the first in a series, to identify the reasons why only a little more than half of eligible voters actually are casting ballots in Arizona, as well as a first-of-its-kind knowledge bank of information on Arizona government to ensure that voters can vote in an informed manner.

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ContributorsGottsfield, Hon. R.L. (Contributor) / Hammond, Larry A. (Contributor) / Lee Elm, Donna (Contributor) / Morrison Institute of Public Policy (Contributor)
Created2017-08-01
Description

The 2015 State of Our State Conference focused on criminal justice reform and included several white papers from various authors, researchers and legal officials from different perspectives. Here is the latest contribution in the series published by Morrison Institute for Public Policy as part of its ongoing effort to encourage

The 2015 State of Our State Conference focused on criminal justice reform and included several white papers from various authors, researchers and legal officials from different perspectives. Here is the latest contribution in the series published by Morrison Institute for Public Policy as part of its ongoing effort to encourage public dialogue on criminal justice issues. America is witnessing a growing national consensus that we should not be incarcerating nonviolent drug offenders, even those with prior drug convictions, who have not committed property crimes. Many other less-serious offenders could receive reduced sentences without threatening public safety. Even when offenders deserve incarceration, they may not have deserved the amount of time imposed – the punishment did not fit the crime. These are among the evidence-based arguments presented by three veteran attorneys in “Fixing Arizona’s Mass Incarceration Dilemma.” The paper’s authors are former Maricopa County Superior Court Judge R.L. Gottsfield, Phoenix attorney Larry A. Hammond, founder and president of the Arizona Justice Project, and former Maricopa County public defender Donna Elm. Touching on all aspects of the justice system, the authors assert that Arizona is behind the curve in addressing its mass incarceration problem. The importance of ignoring the direction the country is going cannot be understated for Arizona, which has one of the highest incarceration rates. It is even more unjustified in light of research indicating that shorter sentences do not jeopardize public safety – with safety being the mainstay basis for Arizona’s heavy sentencing regime.