If we get technical and start over analyzing everything it is all very dependent on the Modulus of Elasticity (MOE) and the thickness of each lam. Like Del points out, a bamboo backing can pull your neutral axis (NA) towards the back of the bow. BUT, this requires that the bamboo be "stronger" than the belly, belly/core materials. For quick and clean examples lets take a bow limb and make each lam an equal thickness and of rectangular cross section. and we will use the following MOE information for giggles: Bamboo 20GPa, Hard Maple 12.6 GPa, Ipe 22 GPa (and for fun Glass at 80GPa which is a rough approximate)
Bamboo backed Maple: Significant shift of NA to the back of the bow, glue line is under compressive force. This puts some compression force on the belly side of the bamboo
Bamboo backed Ipe: Slight shift of NA to the belly of the bow, glue line under tensile force. Some tensile force on the back of the Ipe lam.
Now lets look at some Trilams with three lams of equal thickness and rectangular cross section.
Bamboo backed Ipe, Maple Core: Slight shift of NA to the belly, majority of the core is in tension. one glue line is in tension, the other is in compression.
Bamboo Backed Ipe, Ipe core: Large shift of the NA to the belly, probabably right next to the ipe-ipe glue line in the core. Core is mostly under tension. One glue line firmly in tension, second glue line near neutral.
Bamboo backed Maple, Ipe Core: Large shift of the NA to the back of the bow, probably near the glue line but in the ipe core. Core is mostly under compression.
Glass backed Glass, Maple core: NA at center of the limb, however due to the discrepancy in MOE the maple carries little force, that said there are a large number of shear forces due to the distortion that the maple must undergo in movement.
That is a horrifically simplified version of the relationships and assumes that all of the material properties are equal throughout the thickness of the material (bamboo in particular). Rounding the belly of the bow will shift the NA to the back, using different thicknesses in relation to one another changes it as well.
Adam