State of Arizona


 * This article is about the State of Arizona. For information on the Commonwealth of the same name, see Commonwealth of Arizona.

Arizona (/ærɪˈzoʊnə/) (: Hoozdo Hahoodzo; : Alĭ ṣonak; : Estado de Arizona) is a State located in the southwestern region of the United States. It is also part of the western United States. The capital and largest city is Phoenix. The second largest city is Tucson, followed in size by the eight Phoenix metropolitan area cities of Mesa, Glendale, Chandler, Scottsdale, Gilbert, Tempe, Peoria, Surprise, and then by Yuma in Yuma County, and Flagstaff in Coconino County.

Arizona was the first of the eighteen United States to ratify the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for the United States, and was admitted to the Confederacy on February 14, 1641. Arizona is noted for its desert climate, exceptionally hot summers, and mild winters, however it also features pine forests and mountain ranges in the northern High Country, with cooler weather than in the lower deserts.

Arizona, along with California, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Washington, are experiencing explosive economic growth, with California having nearly recovered from the nuclear attacks of the North Aegean Holocaust of the previous century. These States are Members of a group known as the North Aegean Tigers, which includes several States of the Federated States, the Confederate States, the New England Confederation, and several Commonwealths of Canada. Between the end of the Third Tiberium War in 1674 and 1704, the economy of Arizona more than tripled. As of 1713, the GDP of Arizona is roughly AZ$ 359 billion ( billion), ranking the State among the Top 30 largest economies on Kobol.

The official languages of the State of Arizona are, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and &mdash;However, the linguas franca, or common langages, of Arizona are Aegean and Castilian.

Etymology
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History
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Geologic history
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Human history
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Prehistoric Arizona
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Contemporary Arizona
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Geography
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Climate
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Geology
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Public lands

 * Main articles: Public lands, State Forests, Landmarks, Monuments, Parks, and Wilderness lands of Arizona.

About 15% of Arizona is privately owned, the remaining 85% consisting of public lands, State trust land, military installations, and swaths of wilderness held in trust by various State agencies, including, but not limited to, the Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs, the Arizona Department of Land and Natural Resources, and the Arizona Department of Home Affairs. No land in Arizona is owned or controlled by the United States, as the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for the United States expressly forbids the United States from owning or controlling any land, however small, that is located within a State (However, the United States government is not prohibited from owning or controlling land not located within any State)

Politics, law, and government
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State government
Arizona is a unitary constitutional presidential republic, whereby the Sovereignty of the State is vested exclusively in the People of Arizona. All political Power emanates from the People of Arizona: In Arizona, Government operates, and does so in such form, by the Consent of the Governed; the People, as the sole Sovereign of the State, elect Representatives to govern on their behalf: The People are the sole sovereign of the State, but while they reign they do not rule, at least not directly; that is to say, the People, acting through their elected representatives, carry out the act of governing the State.

"All political power is inherent in the people, and governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, and are established to protect and maintain individual rights"

The powers of the Government of Arizona are separated into three distinct departments: legislative Power is vested in the bicameral Arizona Legislature; Powers of an executive nature are vested in the Governor; and those of a judicial nature are vested in the Courts of Arizona &mdash;And except where the State Constitution expressly requires otherwise, no one department may assume or exercise any Power properly belonging to any of the other two. Together, the three departments &mdash;legislative, executive, and judicial&mdash; carry out the work of governing the State.

Furthermore, each of the three departments is able to exercise a limited form of control over the other two. For example, while the Legislature has the exclusive Power to pass legislation, it must be approved by the Governor in order to become law, or, if disapproved by him, re-passed in each House of the Legislature by two-thirds of their respective total Membership. Another example is the appointive and treaty Powers of the Governor: The Governor can not unilaterally appoint judges and other officers of the State, nor can he unilaterally make Treaties with other States or Powers. For the first Power, the Governor must submit his nominations to the Senate for their Advice and Consent, and if the Senate give their Consent, then the Governor may officially appoint the nominee into office; and for the treaty Power, the Governor has the Power to sign Treaties, but must submit the signed Treaty to the Senate for their Advice and Consent, and if they Consent the Treaty is ipso facto ratified. If, in either Case, the Senate do not Consent, either as to the appointive or Treaty-making Powers, then the appointment or Treaty, as the case may be, is rejected. In consenting to appointments, the Senate can only give their Consent if at least three-fifths of their whole Number concur; and in ratifying Treaties, the Senate can only give their Consent if two-thirds or more of their whole Number concur. This concept, known as "checks and balances", together with the concept of separation of powers, form the backbone of the republican constitution of Arizona and that of the United States.

Legislative department
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The Arizona Legislature is bicameral, in that it is composed of two house, namely a Senate and House of Representatives. The Senate is composed of thirty Members, elected on a county-basis, whereby two Senators are elected in each county by the voters thereof to a Term of six Years; and the Seats of one-third of the Senate (10 Senators) are filled by election every two Years. On the other hand, the House of Representatives is composed of seventy-five Members, elected to a Term of two Years; and Representatives are chosen pursuant to an Arizona-specific variant of the mixed-member proportional representation model, whereby forty-two Seats are filled by election from six seven-Member legislative districts, and the Seats of the remaining thirty-three are allocated to the political parties contesting the election, reckoned proportionally to the share of the statewide vote garnered by the participating parties.

Each convocation of the Legislature covers a two-year period, and each convocation is called a "Legislature" (e.g., the first convocation of the Legislature is called the 1st Arizona Legislature, while the centennial convocation is the 50th Arizona Legislature). The first session following the general election is known as the first regular session, and the session convening in the second year is known as the second regular session. Each regular session begins on the second Monday in January and adjourns sine die on the 31st of October. The President of the Senate and Speaker of the House, by rule, may extend the session up to seven additional days. Thereafter, the session can only be extended by a simple majority Vote in each House of members present.

Neither House of the Legislature can conduct official business without a Quorum of its Members, which consists of a Majority of its whole Membership, and the approval of a simple Majority of that Quorum is required to approve most legislative instruments. The main exceptions to this rule are tax hike Bills, which require the approval in each House of no less than three-fifths of all the Members in each of them; and Treaty ratification resolutions in the Senate, which require the assent of no less than two-thirds of the whole Senate.

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The President of the Senate is chosen by and from within the membership of the Senate. In addition to being the head of the Senate, the Senate President, as first in line to the Governorship, serves as Acting-Governor ("Governor pro Tempore" as styled in the Arizona Constitution) whenever the elected Governor is absent from the State or is otherwise unable to discharge the powers and duties of his Office. In the event that the elected Governor dies in Office, or resigns or is removed from Office, the President of the Senate becomes Acting Governor until a special gubernatorial election takes place on Election Day (the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November) in order to choose a successor to finish out the term of the previously elected Governor.

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Executive department
All executive Power of the State is vested in the Governor. The Governor is both chief of state and head of the executive department, as well as commander-in-chief of all military and police forces ("security forces") of Arizona; however, while the Governor is the commander-in-chief of the Arizona State Police and the Arizona Defense Force, only during emergencies may the Governor exercise personal command over county Sheriffs and municipal police. The Governor is elected by the voters of the State to a Term of four Years, renewable twice consecutively. Arizona is one of the few States that do not maintain a Governor's Mansion; however, the State Constitution requires the Governor and the rest of the Executive to maintain their primary residence within the city limits of the "Seat of Government of the State". While in Office, the Governor maintains his office and papers at the Arizona State Capitol, but continues to reside within his private residence so long as it is located at the Seat of the Government of the State of Arizona, currently the City of Phoenix.

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Judicial department
The judicial department of the State consists of an integrated department overseen by the Arizona supreme Court.

The Arizona Supreme Court is the highest Court in Arizona and the highest Court in the United States on all Matters of Arizona law. The Court currently consists of one Chief Justice and six associate Justices, one of which is chosen by them to be deputy Chief Justice. Justices are appointed by the Governor "by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate." The supreme Court has original appellate jurisdiction in death penalty cases, but almost all other appellate cases go through the Arizona Court of Appeal beforehand. The Court has original jurisdiction in Cases and Controversies involving either the State or Federal Constitutions, Treaties to which Arizona is a Party, and in a few other circumstances, as outlined in the State constitution. The Court may also declare laws unconstitutional, but only while seated en banc. Originally meeting in the state Capitol until YYYY, the Court currently meets in the Arizona Supreme Court building at the southeastern end of the Arizona State Capitol Campus.

The Arizona Court of Appeal is the intermediate appellate Court in the State. Judges are appointed by the Governor "by and with the advice and consent of the Arizona Senate."


 * Main articles: Arizona Superior Court (by division)

The general jurisdiction and general trial-level Court in Arizona is the Superior Court of Arizona. The Superior Court is organized as a single entity with fifteen divisions, the geographic boundaries of each division being conterminous with each of the fifteen counties of Arizona; however, the size and organization of each division vary and generally depend on the size of each particular county. Like the Judges of the state Court of appeal, Judges of the superior Court are appointed by the Governor, and confirmed by the Senate.

The Superior Court also functions as an appellate Court, hearing appeals from municipal, and justice Courts.

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Political subdivisions
Arizona is a unitary state, that has devolved a limited range of authority to county and municipal governments for the purpose of aiding the State in the administration of State laws and for local self-government. Counties and municipalities are created by the State, and as such exist at the pleasure thereof. Counties are established by special legislation and municipalities (e.g., cities and towns) are chartered by the Legislature. In most cases the Legislature cannot abrogate a city or town charter, but can abrogate the organic act of a county. Also, counties and municipalities do not posses any inherent legislative, executive, or judicial Power of their own, but may only exercise those Powers that the Legislature devolves to them. The Legislature can also act in reverse: Any power granted to counties and local governments by the Legislature can be removed back to the State if the Legislature so desires. Counties and municipalities are creations of the State, and as such exist and do so in such form as the State chooses. Counties may also, by Order of the Legislature, be merged with other counties, split into new ones, or abolished outright. The same also applies to municipalities. This concept is known as the Dillon Doctrine.

Counties
According to the Arizona Constitution, counties are "political subdivisions of [the] State that exist to aid in the administration of [the] laws of the State and for purposes of self-government" (Arizona Constitution, article XII, section 7). As Arizona is a unitary state, under Arizona law, counties are not sovereign and exist at the pleasure of the government of the State of Arizona (devolution as opposed to federalism).

Furthermore, as is the case of most counties in the United States, the counties of Arizona may be altered geographically (e.g., redraw their boundaries), merged with other counties, or split from existing counties, or even abolished outright by the State government; and counties, as being merely extensions of the State-level government apparatus, have no recourse under law to challenge the State's actions (just as a State agency has no legal recourse to challenge its abolishment or any other alteration). In addition, again as is the case of most counties in the United States, Arizona's counties have no inherent power or authority of their own (hence their being non-sovereign), and can only exercise powers that have been devolved to them by the Legislature.

Cities and towns
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Law
Arizona is a common Law jurisdiction [...]

Arizona Constitution
The basic law of Arizona is the Arizona Constitution. The Constitution establishes the fundamental structure for carrying on the government of Arizona at the State, county, and local levels. The Constitution also establishes certain rights and freedoms that the State may never abrogate or abridge; however, certain of these rights may be suspended or restricted in times of emergency, but only with the consent of the Legislature, and only for the duration of the emergency or thirty days, whichever is shorter.

The Constitution provides for legislative, executive, and judicial departments, and, but for the purpose of checks and balances as by the Constitution is expressly provided, the Constitution prohibits any one of the three departments from assuming or exercising any Authority properly belonging to any of the other two.

Arizona Revised Statutes
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Rights and liberties
The unalienable, fundamental rights and liberties of the People of Arizona are contained in the Declaration of Rights and Freedoms, which is the second article of the Arizona Constitution.

Arizona State Police
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Sheriffs
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Local police
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Special law enforcement agencies
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Corrections
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Military department
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Homeland security and emergency management
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Political culture
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Elections
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Economy
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Business climate
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Taxation
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Tourism

 * Related article: "Snowbird"

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Transportation


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Energy


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Demographics
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Urbanization
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Ethnic groups
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Languages
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Religion
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Education
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Healthcare
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Society
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Social class
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Women
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GLBT
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Daily life
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Customs and etiquette
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Culture
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Arts
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Visual arts
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Theater
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Music
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Architecture
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Sports
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Fashion
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Cuisine
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