Awards & Winners

Walter Duranty

Date of Birth 1884
Place of Birth Liverpool
(United Kingdom, England, Merseyside, United Kingdom, with Dependencies and Territories, Lancashire, North West England)
Nationality England
Profession Journalist
Walter Duranty was a Liverpool-born, Anglo-American journalist who served as the Moscow Bureau Chief of The New York Times. Duranty won a Pulitzer Prize in 1932 for a series of stories on the Soviet Union. Duranty has been criticized for his denial of widespread famine, most particularly the Ukraine mass starvation. Years later, there were calls to revoke his Pulitzer; even The Times acknowledged his articles constituted "some of the worst reporting to appear in this newspaper." His reporting and motivations have been hotly debated, leading to calls to revoke his Pulitzer. Duranty's reporting is faulted for being too uncritical of the Soviet regime, including having presented Soviet propaganda as legitimate reporting.

Awards by Walter Duranty

Check all the awards nominated and won by Walter Duranty.

1932


Pulitzer Prize for Correspondence
(For a series of articles on the practical operation of the Five Year Plan in Russia.)