His books include
Lethal Arrogance: Human Fallibility and Dangerous Technologies (New York: St. Martin's Press/Palgrave, December 1999);
The Socio-Economics of Conversion: From War to Peace (New York: M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 1995);
Making Peace Possible: The Promise of Economic Conversion (Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1989); and
The Overburdened Economy: Uncovering the Causes of Chronic Unemployment,Inflation and National Decline (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986). Forthcoming books include
The Peacekeeping Economy scheduled to be released in Winter of 2011 by Yale University Press.
Dr. Dumas has spoken at more than 250 conferences and special lectures since 1980, including symposia sponsored by the Sandia National Laboratories, the Los Alamos National Laboratory, the U.S. Department of State, the United Nations, the World Bank and the Russian Academy of Sciences (at that time, the "Soviet Academy of Sciences"), as well as professional meetings of economists, sociologists, political scientists, physicists, engineers, historians, physicians, management scientists, teachers, labor unions and members of Congress. He has addressed the United Nations, testified at city, state and federal government hearings, and discussed the policy implications of his work on more than 300 TV and radio programs in the U.S., former Soviet Union, Canada, Europe and the Pacific. From 1991-93, he was Vice Chair of the Governor's Taskforce on Economic Transition of the State of Texas.
He has analyzed the effects of federal government spending for "a Nuclear Watch of New Mexico project to evaluate the Department of Energy's (DOE) economic impact on the state of New Mexico" (pg. 1).
While on a one-semester sabbatical from UT-Dallas in Fall 1997, he held the GarreyCarruthers Distinguished Chair in the Honors Program at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.. While at UNM-Albuquerque, he gave numerous public talks and seminars for faculty.
Other areas of his work include accountability issues pertaining to the behavior of economic advisors in the arena of international economic development. Together with Janine Wedel, he organized and chaired the conference and working group "Building Accountability into International Economic Development Advising" in Pu?tusk, Poland (September 21—24, 2003). A related monograph, co-authored by Dr. Janine Wedel and Greg Callman, titled "Confronting Corruption, Building Accountability: Lessons From the World of International Development Advising" will be published by Palgrave in 2010.
Organizations with which Dr. Dumas has collaborated or for which he has made contributions include the Swedish Chapter of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (), Physicians for Social Responsibility, and Nuclear Watch of New Mexico. On more than one occasion Professor Dumas spoke at meetings organized by SLMK, for example, at meetings held in Moscow with the Russian Foreign Ministry, the Rosatom ()...at that time, the Ministry for Atomic Energy of the Russian Federation (), or MinAtom (), and the Russian Duma (Russian Parliament).This statement appeared in a SLMK newsletter:
Dialogue with Decision Makers: Together with Russian PPNW we have arranged meetings in Moscow from which we have just returned. We had meetings on the Human Factor issue with a number of high level [sic] specialist, with the speaker of the State Duma, with the minister of Minatom, and at the Foreign Ministry. Prof Lloyd Dumas and Dr Christina Lundius were interviewed during 1,5 hours by Prof Kapitza in [h]is scientific TV program on the question of the Human Factor and [d]angerous technologies like Nuclear weapons. [1]
His work has received noteworthy attention from notable persons such as Amitai Etzioni, Professor Kosta Tsipis of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the late Kenneth Boulding, John Kenneth Galbraith, Jan Tinbergen (Nobel Laureate in Economics), and Retired USN Rear Admiral Eugene J. Carroll, Jr. Dr. Etzioni was the Series Editor for the series "Studies in Socio-Economics", a culmination of research presented at the International Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics. An edited book by Dr. Dumas,
The Socio-Economics of Conversion from War to Peace was included in the series. (See Publications for a full citation for this book.) Of Dr. Dumas' contribution to macroeconomic theory, Kenneth Boulding wrote in the preface to Dumas' book,
The Overburdened Economy, "This is a very important book. . . . Lloyd Dumas has challenged one of the implicit assumptions of the Keynesian Revolution ... the assumption that all activity which is paid for must be productive. His questioning of this assumption may well set off a reorganization of the economic information system ... Dumas's work is a very valuable contribution to the coming transformation of economic thought" (pg.
xi). In praise of the same book (see Blurbs or Dust Jacket), Dr. Galbraith wrote "This is a book of real substance by a scholar of high competence. ... I urge for it and for Professor Dumas the attention they both deserve." and Jan Tinbergen wrote "[The Overburdened Economy] throws much light on the problem of the deceleration of economic growth of both the USA and the Soviet Union."
Quotations
The technological brilliance we have applied to the improvement of the material well-being of human society over the millennia has given us the technical capacity to assure that no human being need starve, thirst, or lack shelter or any other rudiments of a decent existence. That same technological brilliance, applied to the tools of mass destruction, has given us the technical capacity to assure the termination of human society, if not all life on this vital and beautiful earth we call home. Which of these potentials we will ultimately realize depends more on our wisdom than on our brilliance