🇨🇦 Canada: Judicial Review of Immigration Decisions

Where It Happens

  • Federal Court of Canada has exclusive jurisdiction to review most immigration decisions (e.g., refugee claims, visa refusals, removal orders) under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA).

Process

  1. Leave (Permission) Stage
  • File an Application for Leave and for Judicial Review within strict deadlines
  • 15 days after an in-Canada decision
  • 60 days after an outside-Canada decision.
  • The Court decides whether there is an arguable case. Most applications are decided on written submissions.
  1. Judicial Review Hearing
  • If leave is granted, a hearing is held before a Federal Court judge.
  • The Court examines whether the immigration officer or tribunal made a legal or procedural error (e.g., breach of procedural fairness, unreasonable decision).
  1. Remedies
  • The Federal Court cannot substitute its own decision.
  • If the judge finds an error, the decision is set aside and sent back to a different officer or tribunal member for re-determination.

Key Features

  • No automatic right to introduce new evidence (focus is on the record below).
  • No right of appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal unless leave is granted on a certified question of general importance.

🇺🇸 United States: Judicial Review of Immigration Decisions

Where It Happens

  • Federal Courts of Appeals review final removal (deportation) orders and many other immigration agency actions under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).
  • District courts handle certain constitutional or procedural challenges (e.g., unlawful detention habeas cases).

Process

  1. Administrative Exhaustion
  • Noncitizens usually must first appeal to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) after an immigration judge’s decision.
  1. Petition for Review
  • Must be filed in the appropriate U.S. Court of Appeals within 30 days of the BIA’s final decision.
  1. Scope of Review
  • Courts review legal and constitutional claims and whether findings are supported by substantial evidence.
  • “Jurisdiction-stripping” provisions limit review of discretionary decisions (e.g., certain waivers or cancellations of removal).
  1. Remedies
  • The Court may vacate and remand (send back) the case to the immigration judge or BIA for further proceedings consistent with its decision.

Key Comparisons

Aspect Canada United States
Initial forum Federal Court (single judge) U.S. Court of Appeals
Filing deadline 15 or 60 days 30 days
Need for leave (permission) Yes No (after BIA appeal)
Scope of review Legality, procedural fairness, reasonableness Legal/constitutional errors, substantial evidence
Remedy Set aside & return for re-decision Vacate & remand for further proceedings

Practical Tips

  • Strict deadlines: Missing them almost always ends the case.
  • Record is crucial: Both systems generally review the evidence that was before the original decision maker.
  • Legal assistance: These are highly technical procedures—representation by counsel experienced in immigration litigation is strongly recommended.

 

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