03/08/2026
A profession can be dominated by women and still reward masculinity.
👉Dog training is one of them.👈
When sociologists study representation in a profession, they don’t just look at who works there.
They also look at where authority, visibility, and credibility concentrate.
Because those things aren’t always distributed evenly.
Dog training and shelter behaviour work are often described as female-dominated fields.
In many communities, the majority of people doing the day-to-day work are:
• puppy instructors
• behaviour consultants
• shelter behaviour teams
• veterinary technicians
• rescue coordinators
Women along with many trans and nonbinary professionals make up a large portion of the people helping dogs and their humans every day.
But representation isn’t only about numbers.
Researchers studying other female-dominated professions have observed a pattern sometimes called the glass escalator.
Men entering female-dominated fields are often:
• perceived as more authoritative
• encouraged toward leadership roles
• promoted more quickly
• granted credibility earlier
Not necessarily because they’re more skilled, but because authority itself is often culturally coded as masculine.
Dog training is especially vulnerable to this dynamic because the profession is largely unregulated.
There’s no universal licensing body determining expertise, so credibility often gets assigned through things like:
• confidence
• branding
• presentation
• visibility
Sometimes as much as, or more than, education, experience, or evidence.
Confidence is interpreted differently depending on who expresses it and how their gender is perceived.
This isn’t about blaming individuals.
It’s about understanding how professional cultures form and how we can build industries where knowledge, ethics, and outcomes carry more weight than bravado or volume.
↪️The future of dog training isn’t built on dominance.
It’s built on understanding behaviour.
And thousands of skilled trainers — many of them women and other marginalized genders — are doing that work every day.
Happy International Women’s Day🐾