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The Future Of Dogs

The Future Of Dogs

By: Hannah Molloy
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The Future Of Dogs is Hosted by dog behaviour geek and qualified animal behaviourist Hannah Molloy. Jump into the ever growing conversation as Hannah interviews some of the worlds most groundbreaking professionals intent on shaping the future of dogs internationally in their unique field of expertise. How we breed, train, groom, study, campaign, buy and understand dogs is up for debate, what do you think the future of dogs should hold?

© 2026 The Future Of Dogs
Biological Sciences Science
Episodes
  • Episode 35: The Future of Dog Rescue Part 4 - Resilient Rescues with Tom Candy
    Mar 20 2026

    Building a bond with a rescue dog can be one of the most fulfilling relationships you will ever have. Whether you get a chonky head-butt dog that launches at you with anxious love or a shy guy that takes time and trust to slowly come out of his shell, going on the journey of getting to know a dog with a past is absolutely precious.

    But behind every adoption photo there is also a system under pressure, and especially now. Full kennels, complicated behaviour cases, difficult welfare decisions and the extraordinary people trying to hold it all together.

    In this episode of The Future of Dogs, we turn our spotlight toward the dogs who need a platform and a red carpet all year round, rescue dogs.

    I’m joined by Tom Candy to talk honestly about the realities of working on the front line of dog rescue and to dream big about his ‘what if?’ that could shape the future of dogs.


    Tom helps us to:

    Debunk some of the myths and misunderstandings about rescue dogs

    Explain how the landscape of dog rescue has changed over the last few decades

    Understand how the length of a dogs stay in kennels can dramatically impact welfare

    Celebrate the amazing success stories that keep him and so many others in rescue filled up and able to pour out to dogs and the community

    Because resilient rescues of the future aren’t just about second chances.
    They will ask how we can build a world where fewer dogs need rescuing in the first place.


    To stay in touch with Tom and check out his podcast out on Spotify head to

    https://simplifyingshelterbehaviour.com/




    More about your host:

    Hannah is a qualified dog behaviour specialist in the UK with a degree in Animal Behaviour and a specialism in dog body language and pet dog behaviour. She's trained over 10,000 pet dogs in the last 10 years and written an illustrated guide to dog behaviour called ‘Whats my dog thinking: Understand your dog to give them a happy life’. She featured as one of 3 experts on the prime time Channel 4 television series 'Puppy School' and currently teaches body language and handling courses to vets, groomers and pet shops to reduce bite incidents and increase the handling and observation skills of these awesome, but often overlooked, fields of pet care. She currently works as a behavioural expert for Agria Pet Insurance and leads the campaign for responsible dog ownership with the All Party Parliamentary Dog Advisory Welfare Group in Westminster.


    Big thanks to our season 2 sponsor Amplified Behaviour

    www.amplifiedbehaviour.com


    And you can train along with Hannah as a pet owner or a pet professional at www.amplifiedbehaviour.com

    @amplifiedbehaviour @thehannahmolloy


    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 18 mins
  • Episode 34: The Future of Dog Rescue Part 3 - War Torn Dogs with Pen Farthing & Nowzad
    Mar 6 2026

    March is Crufts month. A time where we celebrate the polished perfection of the domesticated dog. Dogs with gleaming coats strut the green carpet with royal names.

    But while the cameras turn towards the show ring, there are other dogs living very different lives.

    Dogs walking across rubble. Dogs surviving deserts, conflict zones and military bases. Dogs who meet soldiers and become lifelines for one another in the middle of chaos.

    In this episode of The Future of Dogs, Hannah is joined by Pen Farthing, founder of the NOWZAD charity, to explore the complicated world of war-torn dogs.

    We talk about:

    • What life is really like for dogs living in conflict zones
    • The powerful bond that formed between Pen and stray dog Nowzad in Helmand, Afghanistan.
    • The ethics and complexity behind rescuing and relocating animals from war zones
    • The valiant continuing efforts of the Nowzad charity supporting dogs abandoned due to Russias invasion of Ukraine.

    To keep up with all of the amazing work of the Nowzad charity and support their ongoing projects visit:

    https://www.nowzad.com

    @nowzadrescue



    More about your host:

    Hannah is a qualified dog behaviour specialist in the UK with a degree in Animal Behaviour and a specialism in dog body language and pet dog behaviour. She's trained over 10,000 pet dogs in the last 10 years and written an illustrated guide to dog behaviour called ‘Whats my dog thinking: Understand your dog to give them a happy life’. She featured as one of 3 experts on the prime time Channel 4 television series 'Puppy School' and currently teaches body language and handling courses to vets, groomers and pet shops to reduce bite incidents and increase the handling and observation skills of these awesome, but often overlooked, fields of pet care. She currently works as a behavioural expert for Agria Pet Insurance and leads the campaign for responsible dog ownership with the All Party Parliamentary Dog Advisory Welfare Group in Westminster.


    Big thanks to our season 2 sponsor Amplified Behaviour

    www.amplifiedbehaviour.com


    And you can train along with Hannah as a pet owner or a pet professional at www.amplifiedbehaviour.com

    @amplifiedbehaviour @thehannahmolloy



    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 10 mins
  • The Future of Dog Training Part 3 - Regulating Dog Training with Sue Evans
    Feb 27 2026

    We’re stepping into the highly contentious land of Regulating Training this week with the Yoda of dog regulation Sue Evans.” If you’ve ever Googled “dog trainer near me” and felt like you’d opened a lucky dip of credentials, philosophies, price points, and acronyms… you’re not alone.

    Dog training in the UK has grown up fast since it started being recognised as a profession in the 90s, but like many young professions, it’s in it’s teenage years. It might be tall, loud, and impressively attention grabbing…but it’s dangerously unsupervised and that lack of oversight is having some disastrous consequences.

    We’ve got an industry where almost anyone can call themselves a trainer, where letters after your name often mean absolutely nothing to the wider world where we’ve got a dozen codes of conduct that don’t overlap and where owners are stuck trying to decipher who is safe, skilled, and ethical while their dog is often collateral damage, crying out for credible support.

    And then there’s the elephant in the training hall: the tool debate. Not as a valid conversation about welfare and evidence, but as a culture war that fractures the community, and keeps us so busy arguing with each other that we forget the goal is better outcomes for dogs and people.

    In this episode, Hannah and Sue help us step back and ask the big questions:

    - How did we get here?

    - Why has “self-regulation” been unsuccessful as a measure of industry quality for practitioners and the public?

    - How we might unite a divided industry without pretending differences don’t exist and what do we do about the tool debate?

    - How can we design industry regulation that protects dogs and supports owners, doesn’t turn behaviour advice into a luxury product only available to those who can afford it and allows a broad spectrum of practitioners to have their skills recognised without having to scrabble for higher and higher academic qualifications?

    If you’ve ever wondered why two professionals can look at the same dog and give completely different advice, why owners are overwhelmed, or why our industry sometimes feels like it’s building moving trains and laying track at the same time while arguing about who’s driving… this one’s for you.

    The future of dog training can’t just be louder opinions and shinier branding. It has to be knowledgeable, trustworthy, respectful, accessible, accountable, and kind enough to keep the door open for owners and learners who are doing their best with the resources they have.
    And we’ll need all hands on deck to get there.

    To stay in touch with Sue or sign up to the Registration Council for Dog Training and Behaviour Practitioners head to:

    https://reg-council-dtbp.uk/

    For the latest on what The All Party Parliamentary Dog Advisory Welfare Group (APDAWG) is doing in the regulation space sign up for their newsletter here:

    https://apdawg.co.uk/

    More about your host:

    Hannah is a qualified dog behaviour specialist in the UK with a degree in Animal Behaviour and a specialism in dog body language and pet dog behaviour. She currently works as a behavioural expert for Agria Pet Insurance and leads the campaign for responsible dog ownership with the All Party Parliamentary Dog Advisory Welfare Group in Westminster.

    Big thanks to our season 2 sponsor Amplified Behaviour
    www.amplifiedbehaviour.com

    And you can train along with Hannah as a pet owner or a pet professional at www.amplifiedbehaviour.com
    @amplifiedbehaviour @thehannahmolloy

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 38 mins
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