U.S. Complicity and Japan's Wartime Medical Atrocities: Time for a Response

American Journal of Bioethics 15 (6):40-49 (2015)
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Abstract

Shortly before and during the Second World War, Japanese doctors and medical researchers conducted large-scale human experiments in occupied China that were at least as gruesome as those conducted by Nazi doctors. Japan never officially acknowledged the occurrence of the experiments, never tried any of the perpetrators, and never provided compensation to the victims or issued an apology. Building on work by Jing-Bao Nie, this article argues that the U.S. government is heavily complicit in this grave injustice, and should respond in an appropriate way in order to reduce this complicity, as well as to avoid complicity in future unethical medical experiments. It also calls on other U.S. institutions, in particular the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues, to urge the government to respond, or to at least inform the public and initiate a debate about this dark page of American and Japanese history

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Katrien Devolder
Oxford University

References found in this work

On complicity and compromise.Chiara Lepora - 2013 - Oxford United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. Edited by Robert E. Goodin.
Complicity and causality.John Gardner - 2007 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 1 (2):127-141.
Causeless complicity.Christopher Kutz - 2007 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 1 (3):289-305.

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