Every few years, reform becomes the headline. A new initiative. A task force. A revised policy. Updated language. More training. More programming. The public is told improvement is underway, that progress takes time, that change is happening behind the scenes. And yet the outcomes barely move. Arizona Department of Corrections does not resist reform loudly. It resists it structurally. That distinction matters. Because structural resistance doesn’t look like defiance. It looks like compliance with just enough adjustment to preserve the original design. Incremental reform fails when it leaves the incentive structure untouched. If authority, funding, promotion pathways, and evaluation metrics still reward control, then control remains the dominant operating principle — no matter how many new programs are layered on top. You can add programming to a control-based system, but if the system still measures success by compliance and incident reduction, then programming becomes decorative r...
At some point, the conversation has to move past identifying what’s broken and toward naming what would actually have to change. Because if outcomes haven’t improved despite decades of enforcement, rule revisions, and public messaging, the issue isn’t awareness. It’s architecture. Arizona Department of Corrections is structured around control. Everything flows from that premise. Authority is centralized. Compliance is prioritized. Consequences are immediate and visible. The system is highly effective at enforcing rules within a closed environment. What it has never been structured to do is build internal capacity that survives outside of it. If AZDOC wanted different outcomes, the design would have to shift from control-first to capacity-first. That doesn’t mean eliminating rules or pretending accountability doesn’t matter. It means recognizing that rules are scaffolding, not the structure itself. Scaffolding is temporary. The goal is what gets built underneath it. Right now...