1st Edition

Beyond Behaviour The Ethics of Dog-centred Training

By Erin Jones Copyright 2027
472 Pages 16 Color Illustrations
by CRC Press

472 Pages 16 Color Illustrations
by CRC Press

Every chapter in this book begins from the same place: the dog in front of you, their body, their signals, their experience of the world. Not the method. Not the tool. Not the tradition you were trained in or the certification on your wall. The dog first, always. As society evolves in its understanding of animal welfare and the responsibilities inherent in caring for dogs, the need for... Read more

Preface

Glossary

Introduction

Part 1: Foundations

Chapter 1: Laying the groundwork: Learning theory

Chapter 2: A dog’s perspective: Mental lives

Chapter 3: Theoretical foundations in animal ethics

**Interlude: On trusting cats and leashing dogs **

Part 2: Power and Paradoxes

Chapter 4: Ethical dimensions of the dog-human relationship

              Part 1: A brief history

              Part 2: Social and relational theories

              Part 3: Prejudices, biases, and perceptual distortions in dog–human worlds

**Interlude: Entitlement**

Chapter 5: The lineage of training dogs

**Interlude: Animal Bodies**

Chapter 6: Agency and the canine learner

Part 3: Reimagining

Chapter 7: How we decide: Ethical reasoning and justified action in dog-centred practice

Chapter 8: Methods, morality and the politics of calm

**Interlude: Willie**

Chapter 9: A dog-first ethic: Design, repair, and capacity

Part 1: Critical practice

Part 2: Life and capacity

Chapter 10: Gremlin’s story: A case study in liberation

Chapter 11: Beyond the page: Building an ethical future for dogs and humans

Biography

Erin Jones, PhD, is a researcher, author, and dog behaviour consultant working at the intersection of animal ethics, applied behaviour, and the dog–human relationship. Her work critically examines human exceptionalism, power, agency, consent, and the moral dimensions of training and behaviour support. She holds a PhD in Human-Animal Studies, an MSc in Anthrozoology, a BSc (Hons) in Anthropology and Psychology, and a Postgraduate Diploma in Animal Welfare.

Erin is a Certified Dog Behaviour Consultant and Accredited Dog Trainer with the International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants, a Certified Professional Dog Trainer–Knowledge Assessed and holds animal training and behaviour certifications in Aotearoa New Zealand. She is the founder of Merit Dog Project, Director of the IAABC Foundation Journal, and an international speaker and educator. Her previous books include Constructing Canine Consent and the co-edited collection Topics in Non/Human Coexistence. She is a Canadian based in Aotearoa New Zealand.

 

“This book is captivating in an intellectual and emotional way. Right from the preface I was caught by the vivid descriptions and call to activism; to the importance of teaching another being by listening to their needs and meeting them where they are. This is not a boring, dry ethics dissertation but a text that makes you reevaluate learning theory, what you have done, and what you want to do for the animals you teach. Something very special.”

Amy Learn VMD, DACVB, CABC, Animal Behavior Wellness Center, USA

“This book challenges the dog training profession to grow up ethically. Jones moves beyond technique to ask what our methods demand of dogs, whose comfort they prioritize, and what kind of relationships they normalize. Essential reading for anyone who works with dogs.”

Jessica Pierce, PhD, bioethicist and author of Who’s a Good Dog? and How to Be a Better Human

“Erin Jones asks what is best for the dog in this examination of the moral choices we make in dog training. Thoughtful, fascinating, and grounded in real-life examples, Beyond Behaviour illuminates the ethical dimensions of the decisions we make every day about dogs.”

Zazie Todd, PhD, author of Bark!, Wag, and Purr

“The dog behaviour field has long needed a book willing to ask the questions it mostly avoids - Beyond Behaviour is that book. Rigorous, compassionate, and unflinching, it examines what we genuinely owe the dogs we share our lives with.”

Mia Cobb, PhD, Canine Welfare Scientist, The University of Melbourne, Australia