Aparna Kumari Yelle 20 June 2018
Vanshika Kapoor 24 July 2018
Appeals against immigration decisions made by UK Border Agency officials are made to the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal. The Tribunal will provide a written explanation of their decision, known as a determination. In some cases an unsuccessful appellant may be able to request a redetermination of the appeal. Appellants may represent themselves at appeals to the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal, and the Home Office, which is ultimately in charge of immigration, will be represented by a lawyer or lawyers.
If an appeal is unsuccessful the only UK legal recourse open to the unsuccessful applicant is likely to be by seeking a judicial review. This is a complicated legal process in which it would have to be shown that the public body reaching the decision breached the laws of natural fairness in the way they that they reached their decision.