England and Wales Hunting of wild mammals in the traditional style is banned by the
Hunting Act 2004. Earlier acts, such as the
Protection of Animals Act 1911, the
Protection of Badgers Act 1992 and the
Wild Mammals (Protection) Act 1996 contained specific exemptions for hunting activities.
Scotland In February 2002 the
Scottish Parliament voted by eighty-three to thirty-six to pass legislation to ban hunting with hounds.
MSPs decided not to give compensation to those whose livelihoods or businesses might suffer as a result of the ban. The Act came into effect on 1 August 2002. An article in
The Guardian on 9 September 2004 reported that of the ten Scottish hunts, nine survived the ban, using the permitted exemption allowing them to use packs of hounds to flush foxes to guns. A number of convictions took place under the Act, two for people hunting foxes and ten for
hare coursing. The only prosecution of a traditional mounted hunt led to a not guilty verdict, but to a clarification of the law, with the sheriff saying that the activity of flushing foxes to guns "will require to be accompanied by realistic and one would expect, effective arrangements for the shooting of pest species. The use of what might be termed "token guns" or what was described by
the Crown as paying lip service to the legislation is not available ... as a justification for the continuation of what was referred to in the evidence before me as traditional fox hunting." There were eleven
hunts in Scotland as of February 2015. The continuation of the
current law regarding fox hunting in England and Wales has been guaranteed by the
Scottish National Party. The law regarding fox hunting in Scotland was made stricter in 2023, following the passage and
commencement of the Hunting with Dogs (Scotland) Act 2023, which repealed and replaced the 2002 Act.
Northern Ireland Fox hunting in
Northern Ireland would have been banned had the
Foster Bill become law. However, by the time of subsequent hunting legislation in the
House of Commons, the
Northern Ireland Assembly had been established and the hunting issue had been devolved to that body. A Hunting Bill was introduced into the Northern Ireland Assembly but rejected in December 2010. ==United States==