Professional boxer Claire Hafner gets tested every year for signs of head trauma, by researchers studying hits to the head and long-term degenerative brain conditions. But there’s a personal factor for Hafner: she says if there’s evidence of decline, she’ll retire. The CBC’s Katie Nicholson went with Hafner for this year’s testing — and the results.
Visa program ‘failing’ Palestinians with family in Canada
Sports need better funding to ensure safety, says Canadian Olympic Committee head
How the internet opened a ‘torrent of incoming generosity’
‘Kategate’ and the birth of celebrity conspiracies
N.L. fish harvesters call for more control of their sales
Why happiness rates are falling among younger generations
Searching for the ocean’s undiscovered species
Repairing Africa’s underwater link to the internet
The spiritual experience of witnessing a solar eclipse
What airdropping food, supplies into Gaza looks like from above
Controversy surrounding NDP’s Gaza motion, Liberal’s climate tax
Trusting your kids might discourage them from cheating, research finds
Opponents of diversity in gaming target Canadian consulting firm
Boreal forests move north as Arctic ice melts
The Current Introduces: The Pornhub Empire: Understood
What’s behind Putin’s re-election as Russia’s president
Feeling invisible? You might be languishing
Tennessee high schoolers say they’ve cracked a 1980s cold case
Haitian-led solutions to the country’s political crisis
Helping Nunavut elders age in their own communities
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