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Ivison Trust
The Ivison Trust, formerly known as Parents Against Child Exploitation (Pace), is a charitable organisation in England and Wales that works with parents of children who have been, or are at risk of being, sexually or criminally exploited. The charity was founded in 1996 as the Coalition for the Removal of Pimping (CROP) by Irene Ivison and other affected parents following the murder of Ivison's 17-year-old daughter Fiona in Doncaster.
Ivison Trust was formed as Pace (Parents Against Child Exploitation) in 1996 by Irene Ivison, whose daughter Fiona had been groomed by a known pimp, forced into prostitution, and killed at the age of 17, just three weeks after being forced onto the street and sold for sex by her boyfriend / pimp. Fiona's killer was successfully prosecuted and received a life sentence.
The charity received funding for its first parent support worker in 2002 and grew to a staff of 20 by 2021. In 2025, Pace renamed itself the Ivison Trust.
Irene Ivison was born in Oxford on 5 March 1946 and died after complications from a routine operation on 20 October 2000.
From her daughter's murder in 1993 until her own death in 2000, Ivison campaigned along with other parents to bring the issue of pimping to wider attention. Ivison published a book about her daughter in 1997 called Fiona's Story, recounting how she read of her daughter's death in the newspaper.
For her work, Ivison was nominated for the Emma Humphreys Memorial Prize just three days prior to her death.
Ivison Trust provides parent support workers to parents with children who are, or are vulnerable to, child sexual and criminal exploitation by perpetrators external to the family. Ivison Trust also provides training to other professionals on how child exploitation affects the whole family and works as an advocate on behalf of parents to influence policy and raise awareness.
Ivison Trust has produced several publications and research papers over the years and has worked closely with the BBC on the production of special reports relating to child sexual exploitation, including a BBC Panorama episode called "Teenage Sex for Sale".
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Ivison Trust
The Ivison Trust, formerly known as Parents Against Child Exploitation (Pace), is a charitable organisation in England and Wales that works with parents of children who have been, or are at risk of being, sexually or criminally exploited. The charity was founded in 1996 as the Coalition for the Removal of Pimping (CROP) by Irene Ivison and other affected parents following the murder of Ivison's 17-year-old daughter Fiona in Doncaster.
Ivison Trust was formed as Pace (Parents Against Child Exploitation) in 1996 by Irene Ivison, whose daughter Fiona had been groomed by a known pimp, forced into prostitution, and killed at the age of 17, just three weeks after being forced onto the street and sold for sex by her boyfriend / pimp. Fiona's killer was successfully prosecuted and received a life sentence.
The charity received funding for its first parent support worker in 2002 and grew to a staff of 20 by 2021. In 2025, Pace renamed itself the Ivison Trust.
Irene Ivison was born in Oxford on 5 March 1946 and died after complications from a routine operation on 20 October 2000.
From her daughter's murder in 1993 until her own death in 2000, Ivison campaigned along with other parents to bring the issue of pimping to wider attention. Ivison published a book about her daughter in 1997 called Fiona's Story, recounting how she read of her daughter's death in the newspaper.
For her work, Ivison was nominated for the Emma Humphreys Memorial Prize just three days prior to her death.
Ivison Trust provides parent support workers to parents with children who are, or are vulnerable to, child sexual and criminal exploitation by perpetrators external to the family. Ivison Trust also provides training to other professionals on how child exploitation affects the whole family and works as an advocate on behalf of parents to influence policy and raise awareness.
Ivison Trust has produced several publications and research papers over the years and has worked closely with the BBC on the production of special reports relating to child sexual exploitation, including a BBC Panorama episode called "Teenage Sex for Sale".