So, so, so useful. Last year when I was getting ready to adopt my dog, the first book I read about dog training was by someone who advocates the dominance method. At first I thought that method sounded very reasonable, and I still genuinely appreciate all the guidance around treating a dog like a dog rather than like a little human in a dog suit. However, I have since learned that a lot of the "science" this method is founded on has long since been disproved: dogs are not slightly tamer and smaller wolves, and in fact wolves themselves do not naturally behave in the ways the dominance method relies on. As far as I can tell, this method is only still popular because of the effect it has on a certain subset of humans who feel pleasure in having dominance over their dog. And I guess it makes for good TV.
All this is to say that the last almost-year has led me to this book, which is advocates positive, compassionate training methods and is the polar opposite of all that macho dominance advice. I've already seen a lot of improvement in my dog's behavior since implementing some of the strategies in the book. I am now reading the author's related work Behavioral Adjustment Training 2.0, for dogs like mine who have behavioral quirks. I would recommend these books to anyone with a dog, including those who somehow still believe in the dominance model.