Organ Extraction From Executed Prisoners: Confucian Considerations
American Journal of Bioethics 10 (2):27-28 (2010)
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M. Wang & X. Wang (2010). Organ Donation by Capital Prisoners in China: Reflections in Confucian Ethics. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 35 (2):197-212.
Arthur Caplan (2011). The Use of Prisoners as Sources of Organs–An Ethically Dubious Practice. American Journal of Bioethics 11 (10):1 - 5.
M. Hilberman (2001). Organ Transplants From Executed Prisoners: Louis J Palmer Jr, Jefferson, North Carolina, US and London, McFarland and Company, 1999, 156 Pages, Pound26.25/$35. [REVIEW] Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (2):140-a-141.
Xinzhong Yao & Weiming Tu (eds.) (2010). Confucian Studies: Critical Concepts in Asian Philosophy. Routledge.
Noam Lubell (2003). Medicine in Handcuffs: Restraining Prisoners and Detainees Undergoing Medical Treatment and Hospitalisation. Physicians for Human Rights-Israel.
Sidney Gendin (1989). Prisoners' Dilemma for Prisoners. Criminal Justice Ethics 8 (1):23-25.
Atsushi Asai, Yasuhiro Kadooka & Kuniko Aizawa (2010). Arguments Against Promoting Organ Transplants From Brain-Dead Donors, and Views of Contemporary Japanese on Life and Death. Bioethics 26 (4):215-223.
Hamish Stewart (1997). The Law of Damages and the Prisoners' Dilemma: A Comment on 'Pure and Utilitarian Prisoners' Dilemmas'. Economics and Philosophy 13 (02):231-.
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