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The Cour nationale du droit d'asile (formerly Commission des recours des réfugiés) is the French administrative court which was set up to review appeals from decisions of the OFPRA, granting, refusing or withdrawing refugee status (see right of asylum) and subsidiary protection. It is located at 35, rue Cuvier 93558 Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis.
The grounds for asylum were that ′R′ had converted from Islam to Christianity and if made to return would most likely be subject to severe persecution. The IAT rejected the appeal of ′R′, even though the evidence per se was not in dispute. ′R′ applied to the Court of Appeal for permission to appeal on 1 September 2003.
On 5–6 March 2014, the UK Supreme Court [42] heard an appeal [43] brought by the Home Office concerning the nature of expert linguistic evidence provided to the Home Office in asylum cases, whether expert witness should be granted anonymity, the weight that should be given to reports by the Swedish firm Sprakab, and related matters.
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Refugee roulette refers to arbitrariness in the process of refugee status determinations or, as it is called in the United States, asylum adjudication. Recent research suggests that at least in the United States and Canada, the outcome of asylum determinations largely depends upon the identity of the particular adjudicator to whom an application is randomly assigned, and that the resulting ...
The New Zealand Refugee Status Appeals Authority or RSAA, was an independent authority that heard the appeals of people who had been declined refugee status by the Refugee Status Branch of the New Zealand Immigration Service. It was established in 1991, and was replaced by the Immigration and Protection Tribunal in 2010.
A federal judge on Tuesday blocked a rule that allows immigration authorities to deny asylum to migrants who arrive at the U.S.-Mexico border without first applying online or seeking protection in ...
N.H.V. v Minister for Justice & Equality [2017] IESC 35 [1] was an Irish Supreme Court case in which the Court upheld a challenge to the absolute prohibition on employment of asylum seekers contained in Section 9(4) of the Refugee Act 1996 [2] and held it to be contrary to the constitutional right to seek employment.