Works by Jing-bao Nie ( view other items matching `Jing-bao Nie`, view all matches )

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  1. Jing-Bao Nie (2012). Medical Ethics in China: A Transcultural Interpretation. Routledge.
     
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  2. Jing-Bao Nie (2010). China's Birth Control Program Through Feminist Lenses. In Jackie Leach Scully, Laurel Baldwin-Ragaven & Petya Fitzpatrick (eds.), Feminist Bioethics: At the Center, on the Margins. Johns Hopkins University Press.
     
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  3. Anne Donchin With Susan Dodds & Jing-bao Nie (2007). Moving Toward Gender Justice. Bioethics 21 (9):ii–iii.
  4. Anne Donchin, Susan Dodds & Jing-Bao Nie (2007). Moving Toward Gender Justice. Bioethics 21 (9):ii-iii.
  5. Jing-Bao Nie & Alastair V. Campbell (2007). Multiculturalism and Asian Bioethics: Cultural War or Creative Dialogue? Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 4 (3).
  6. Jing-Bao Nie (2006). Call for Papers on Bioethics in Asia. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 3 (3).
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  7. Jing-Bao Nie (2006). The United States Cover-Up of Japanese Wartime Medical Atrocities: Complicity Committed in the National Interest and Two Proposals for Contemporary Action. American Journal of Bioethics 6 (3):W21-W33.
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  8. Jing-Bao Nie (2004). The West's Dismissal of the Khabarovsk Trial as 'Communist Propaganda': Ideology, Evidence and International Bioethics. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 1 (1).
    In late 1949 the former Soviet Union conducted an open trial of eight Japanese physicians and researchers and four other military servicemen in Khabarovsk, a city in eastern Siberia. Despite its strong ideological tone and many obvious shortcomings such as the lack of international participation, the trial established beyond reasonable doubt that the Japanese army had prepared and deployed bacteriological weapons and that Japanese researchers had conducted cruel experiments on living human beings. However, the trial, together with the evidence presented (...)
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  9. Jing-Bao Nie (2000). The Plurality of Chinese and American Medical Moralities: Toward an Interpretive Cross-Cultural Bioethics. Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 10 (3):239-260.
    : Since the late 1970s, American appraisals of Chinese medical ethics and Chinese responses to American bioethics range from frank criticism to warm appreciation, from refutation to acceptance. Yet in the United States as well as in China, American bioethics and Chinese medical ethics have been seen, respectively, as individualistic and communitarian. In this widely-accepted general comparison, the great variation in the two medical moralities, especially the diversity of Chinese experiences, has been unfortunately minimized, if not totally ignored. Neither American (...)
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  10. Jing-Bao Nie (1999). The Problem of Coerced Abortion in China and Related Ethical Issues. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 8 (04).
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