Shipler joined
The New York Times as a news clerk in 1966. He was promoted to city staff reporter in 1968. He covered housing, poverty, and politics and he won awards from the
American Political Science Association, the
New York Newspaper Guild, and other organizations. During 1973–75 he served as a
New York Times correspondent in Saigon, covering South Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand. He also reported from Burma. In 1975, Shipler spent a semester at the Russian Institute of Columbia University studying the Russian language, Soviet politics, economics, and history in order to prepare for assignment in Moscow. He served as correspondent in
The New York Times Moscow Bureau for four years, 1975–79, and as Moscow bureau chief from 1977 to 1979. He wrote the best-seller
Russia: Broken Idols, Solemn Dreams, which was published in 1983 and updated in 1989. The book won the Overseas Press Club Award in 1983 as the best book that year on foreign affairs. From 1979 to 1984, Shipler served as bureau chief of
The New York Times in Jerusalem. He was co-recipient (with
Thomas Friedman) of the 1983
George Polk Award for covering the
1982 Lebanon War. At the end of his period in Israel he was reprimanded by the director of the Israeli government's press office for breaking
military censorship rules by publishing a report about a
bus hijacking after which two captured hijackers were killed. He spent a year, 1984–85, as a visiting scholar at the
Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. to write
Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land, which explores the mutual perceptions and relationships between Arabs and Jews in Israel and the West Bank. The book won the
1987 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction and was extensively revised and updated in 2002. He was executive producer, writer, and narrator of a two-hour PBS documentary on Arab and Jew, which won a 1990 Dupont-Columbia award for broadcast journalism, and of a one-hour film, "Arab and Jew: Return to the Promised Land", which aired on PBS during August 2002. Shipler served as Chief Diplomatic Correspondent in the Washington Bureau of
The New York Times until 1988. From 1988 to 1990, he was a senior associate at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, writing on transitions to democracy in Russia and Eastern Europe for
The New Yorker and other publications.
Other published works His book,
A Country of Strangers: Blacks and Whites in America, based on five years of research into stereotyping and interactions across racial lines, was published in 1997. Shipler was one of three authors invited by President Clinton to participate in his first town meeting on race. His book,
The Working Poor: Invisible in America, was a national best-seller in 2004 and 2005. It was a finalist for the 2005 National Book Critics Circle Award and the New York Public Library Helen Bernstein Award. It won an Outstanding Book Award from The Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights at Simmons College and led to awards from the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, the New York Labor Communications Council, and the Washington, D.C. Employment Justice Center. Later works include three books on
civil liberties:
The Rights of the People: How Our Search for Safety Invades Our Liberties, published in 2011; ''Rights at Risk: The Limits of Liberty in Today's America
, published in 2012; and Freedom of Speech: Mightier Than the Sword'', published in 2015.
The Shipler Report, As a contributing writer, essays by Shipler appear in the
Washington Monthly. Since April 2021,
Daniel Zwerdling and he are featured on their podcast,
Two Reporters - Shipler and Zwerdling where they "interview stellar guests... examine problems and possible solutions... [and] just fascinating stuff" in novel ways. On November 15, 2023, Stone Lantern Books published
The Wind is Invisible: And Other Poems by Shipler. It is dedicated to his wife and features poems inspired by her and her family tradition of presenting poems on special occasions in their lives, as well as, having one of her photographs for its cover. The collection celebrates life and Nature. In April 2025, he published a novel set at the end of the Vietnam War,
The Interpreter, through Green City Books. == Other awards and honors ==