Article 2 Section 8 - Right to privacy. Section 8. No person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law.
ARS § 13-3019 is the Arizona statute defining the surreptitious photographing crime. You commit this offense if, under certain circumstances, you secretly photograph or film a person without that person's consent (for example, filming a person undressing in a locker room).
In Arizona, it is illegal for anyone to knowingly record another person without their permission.
The person has a reasonable expectation that the person will not be photographed, videotaped, filmed, digitally recorded or otherwise viewed or recorded.
Because Arizona is a one-party consent state for wiretapping and audio recordings, as long as one party involved in a conversation consents to the recording, it is generally considered legal.
There are several states that either have ambiguous recording laws or none at all. Vermont, for example, does not have a call recording law, while Hawaii and Nevada are one-party consent states but still require two-party consent to record conversations.