Abstract:       
  This article uses data obtained from Canadas Immigration and Refugee  Board [IRB] to calculate the refugee claim grant rates of individual IRB  adjudicators.The data reveals that, in 2006, grant rates varied  significantly across adjudicators.Some adjudicators accorded refugee  status in virtually all cases they heard; others granted refugee status  rarely, if at all. The article explores several explanations offered by  the IRB for refugee claim grant rate variations. These explanations  relate to patterns in case assignment due to adjudicator specialization  in particular types of cases from particular regions of the world. The  author contends that while patterns in case assignment do affect grant  rates, they do not account for the full variations evident in the data.  Rather, outcomes in refugee adjudication appear to hinge, at least in  part, on the identity of the adjudicator assigned. The author draws  three main conclusions from the data on refugee adjudication in 2006.  First, further empirical research should be undertaken to verify the  results of the study and to identify specific features of adjudicator  identity that affect refugee claim outcomes. Second, the appointment  process for IRB adjudicators should be carefully scrutinized in light of  grant rate disparities.Third, given both the grant rate disparities and  the life and death stakes involved in refugee adjudication, it is  imperative there be opportunities to meaningfully review negative first  instance refugee determinations. To this end, the government should  immediately implement the provisions in Canadas immigration legislation  that establish a Refugee Appeal Division at the IRB. 
