It's not really possible to answer a question like this without details such as why you were denied and why you think you won't just be denied again. Your best bet is to actually go to your local unemployment office and talk with someone there about whether or not refiling is going to do any good.
Go on your state unemployment site.
If the appeal is to reclaim your job, contact the HR department of the employer or its equivalent. If it is to appeal your qualifications for getting unemployment benefits, ask the employment security office where you were denied the benefits.
Long story
Get a lawyerAnother answer:Because appeals are your right, ask the agency denying you, for the procedure you need to follow to appeal their decision.
Requesters MAY appeal when their request for information is initially denied.
Yes, you can collect unemployment insurance if you have worked in Hawaii but moved to California. Even if you think you do not have enough in Hawaii's unemployment insurance to collect. I worked in California all my life and was offered a job in Hawaii in October 2008. I worked until March 2009 and then tried to collect while i lived in Hawaii. I was denied befits in Hawaii in March 2009, so I moved back to California and could not find work so i collected unemployment in California. It was a knowledgeable person in California EDD that recommended that i file in Hawaii versus California because of the amount i would collect there was a lot more than i collected here. I told them I was denied benefits over there because i did not work long enough over there (hence; i did not put enough money in Hawaii's Kitty) So California's EDD said they would transfer what I put in California's unemployment insurance to Hawaii's unemployment insurance, then that would make me eligible to collect.
It would depend on several factors. If you were denied for cause and the decision was not appealed, then probably not. If denied for lack of justification, then additional information is needed, If denied because the work history and other preliminary data was unavailable, once obtained, the outcome may be different. Remember, denials are not automatically closed, you can always appeal a decision.
When an application (or appeal of some case in a lower court) to the Supreme Court is denied, it is called certiorari denied. In fact, it means that the Supreme Court refuses to accept the application or appeal and will not judge on it
In the UK, no.
It depends on what the VISA was denied for. Example if your wife has HIV, you wouldn't appeal. Usually you may appeal the case.
First, file an appeal, backed up by physician's report, if it was job related and second see of workman's comp covers your inability.
Being denied unemployment benefits can be appealed, in which case the decision is reversed, if warranted, or upheld. In the latter case you would have to start over with a new work history to qualify. Refiling with the same work history/information is not the thing to do.