
Revisión judicial en materia de inmigración
LLEVAR SU CASO A UN TRIBUNAL FEDERAL
En ocasiones, las decisiones de inmigración del IRCC o de la Junta de Inmigración y Refugiados (IRB) pueden parecer injustas, irrazonables o simplemente erróneas. Cuando no existen otras vías de apelación, el Tribunal Federal de Canadá ofrece un mecanismo para impugnar dichas decisiones mediante un proceso denominado Revisión Judicial. Este proceso no implica una nueva audiencia de su caso. El Tribunal no revisará nuevas pruebas ni reevaluará su solicitud. En cambio, analiza cómo se tomó la decisión original: ¿Fue justo el proceso? ¿Actuó el funcionario dentro de sus facultades legales? ¿Fue razonable la decisión en función de los hechos y la ley?
¿Cuándo se puede solicitar una revisión judicial?
Usted puede solicitar una revisión judicial para una amplia gama de asuntos de inmigración, entre ellos:
Denegación de solicitudes de residencia temporal (visado de visitante, permiso de estudios, permiso de trabajo)
Rechazos de solicitudes de residencia permanente , como Express Entry, patrocinios o solicitudes por razones humanitarias y de compasión.
Retrasos o inacción por parte de las autoridades de inmigración , incluyendo retrasos en la tramitación de visados.
Solicitudes de ciudadanía canadiense denegadas
Rechazo de solicitudes de asilo (tras agotar otras vías de apelación)
En la mayoría de los casos, debe solicitar una revisión judicial dentro de los 15 días posteriores a la recepción de una decisión tomada dentro de Canadá o dentro de los 60 días para las decisiones tomadas fuera de Canadá.
Types of Judicial Review Cases We Handle
1. Challenging Delays and Inaction (Mandamus Applications)
If your immigration or visa application has been stuck in processing for an unreasonable amount of time, you may be eligible to file a Mandamus application. This is a type of judicial review that asks the Federal Court to order IRCC or another immigration body to move forward with your case.
Common examples include:
-
PR applications delayed for years without a decision
-
Work or study permits with no update far beyond normal processing times
-
Citizenship applications with unexplained silence
In these cases, our legal team prepares detailed documentation and correspondence showing that:
-
You have fulfilled all your responsibilities,
-
Reasonable processing times have been exceeded, and
-
No legal reason justifies the delay.
Mandamus applications can be highly effective when used strategically and professionally.
2. Challenging Refusals (Leave and Judicial Review)
If your application has been unfairly refused, you may be able to challenge that refusal through a two-step judicial review process:
-
Leave Stage: The Court first decides whether your case is strong enough to proceed.
-
Judicial Review Stage: If leave is granted, the Court will then hear legal arguments from your lawyer and the government.
We frequently challenge refusals such as:
-
Visitor visa refusals based on insufficient ties or vague reasoning
-
Study permit denials citing lack of purpose or unclear study plans
-
Work permit refusals based on “lack of genuineness” or missing documents (even when submitted!)
-
PR rejections where discretion was misused or misapplied
-
Citizenship refusals due to alleged residency miscalculations
We focus on identifying errors in law, breaches of procedural fairness, or irrational decisions that can be overturned or sent back for reconsideration.
Why Legal Representation Matters
Judicial reviews are complex and involve strict timelines, technical arguments, and a deep understanding of immigration law and Federal Court procedures. Unlike regular applications, this is a litigation process—you are taking legal action against a government decision.
Our firm has experience preparing persuasive legal submissions, drafting effective affidavits, and appearing before the Federal Court on behalf of clients from around the world. We tailor our approach based on the type of decision, underlying facts, and available remedies.
Is Judicial Review Right for You?
Not every refusal or delay justifies going to court. But when done properly and at the right time, judicial review can be a powerful tool to:
-
Hold immigration authorities accountable,
-
Correct unfair or irrational decisions, and
-
Move your immigration journey forward.
