Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse
CompletedIICSA
Wide-ranging inquiry into institutional failures to protect children from sexual abuse in England and Wales.
7 years, 7 months
Duration
£190m
Total Cost
725
Witnesses
325
Hearing Days
195,034
Documents
Parliamentary Activity 96 Click to expand
76 questions
20 statements
since Oct 2016
20 Feb 2026
12 Feb 2026
12 Feb 2026
13 Jan 2026
13 Jan 2026
View all 96 mentions →
Reports (16) Click to expand
Timeline (7) Click to expand
07 Jul 2014
Inquiry Announced
Home Secretary announced inquiry into institutional child sexual abuse.
Source
16 Jan 2015
Terms of Reference Set
Broad terms examining institutional failures to protect children.
12 Aug 2016
Chair Appointed
Professor Alexis Jay appointed as fourth and final Chair.
07 Mar 2017
Public Hearings Begin
First public hearings commenced.
06 Aug 2018
First Reports Published
Investigation reports into various institutions began publication.
Costs Click to expand
Total Inquiry Cost (Cumulative)
£189,963,980
to Mar 2023
IICSA Total Expenditure 2015-2023
Cost Breakdown (to Mar 2023)
Inquiry Legal Costs
£52,079,728
Panel remuneration & Counsel to the Inquiry
Core Participant Legal Costs
-
Legal funding for core participants
Panel
£4,808,410
Staff
£85,624,282
Accommodation
£10,234,048
Technology
£8,191,929
Safeguarding
£1,085,618
Other
£27,185,751
Cumulative total over 8 years. The inquiry ran from 2015 to October 2022, with final report published 20 October 2022. Core participant legal costs were funded but not separately reported in IICSA financial statements.
Cost History
Recommendations (5)
Westminster whistleblowing policies for CSA
Recommendation
Government, political parties and other Westminster institutions must have whistleblowing policies and procedures which cover child sexual abuse and exploitation. Every employee must be aware that they can raise any concerns using these policies and that the policies are not …
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Published evidence summary
The UK government confirmed on 18 September 2020 that all government departments have whistleblowing policies and procedures in place that cover child sexual abuse and exploitation, with Civil Service HR providing a model policy to support departments. Regarding Parliament, the UK government stated that internal policies are a matter for each House, but it is clear that employees can raise concerns using these policies. The government's progress tracker, updated in May 2023, indicates this recommendation as completed.
UK Government
(Primary)
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Government department safeguarding policy reviews
Recommendation
The Cabinet Office must ensure that each government department reviews its child safeguarding policy or policies in light of the expert witness report of Professor Thoburn. There must also be published procedures to accompany their policies, in order that staff …
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Published evidence summary
AI analysis did not return a result for this recommendation.
Cabinet Office
(Primary)
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Political party safeguarding policies
Recommendation
All political parties registered with the Electoral Commission in England and in Wales must ensure that they have a comprehensive safeguarding policy. All political parties must also ensure that they have procedures to accompany their policies, in order that politicians, …
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Published evidence summary
AI analysis did not return a result for this recommendation.
Political Parties
(Primary)
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Honours forfeiture for CSA convictions
Recommendation
The criteria for forfeiture of all honours must be formally extended to include convictions, cautions and cases decided by trial of the facts involving offences of child sexual abuse. This must be set out in a published policy and procedure, …
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Published evidence summary
- The Cabinet Office updated its 'Honours Forfeiture' guidance on 30 September 2021 to include convictions, cautions, and 'trial of the facts' findings for sexual offences (Honours Forfeiture, Cabinet Office, 30 September 2021, https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/honours-forfeiture-guidance).
Cabinet Office
(Primary)
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Posthumous honours forfeiture policy
Recommendation
The Cabinet Office should re-examine the policy on posthumous forfeiture, in order to consider the perspectives of victims and survivors of child sexual abuse.
Published evidence summary
The Cabinet Office updated its guidance on honours forfeiture on 30 September 2021, allowing for a formal statement to be published in instances where forfeiture proceedings would have been initiated if the deceased recipient had been living and convicted (Official government response, 22 May 2023). This action addressed the recommendation to re-examine the policy and consider the perspectives of victims and survivors of child sexual abuse. No further published evidence has been identified since September 2021.
Cabinet Office
(Primary)
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