I notice most answers are answered by high rep users and opposed to this suggestion. Can you say wolves guarding the hen house? I think Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely (look at any government for examples...or even at police forces, there's a reason they need internal affairs somewhat separate). I don't really see any accountability here for downvoters or high rep users (moderators as well).
How do you currently challenge a decision? You need to throw up a post risk the reputation (it seems a lot of questions challenging specific decisions or suggestion ways to curb high rep/moderator power are met with severe downvotes), etc... Also it's a pain it uses a lot of energy/time to make the question and in many cases it isn't really worth it. This is like a giant company suing a poor farmer, to challenge the lawsuit requires a lot of time/effort (not money here fortunately), it is often better just to settle/not bother with it. Then these users making poor decisions go on unchecked...The other thing is that there is no database of reversed decisions. If all you do is look at each case on a case by case basis it is hard to keep track of the history.
Slashdot's metamoderating system has the right idea. The community should be the ultimate source for all decisions, not any sort of power users. If one user votes against a moderator/high rep decision, that doesn't mean much. But if 10 users vote against a specific decision (or maybe a higher threshold) then that might be worth reviewing. I would say specific powers need to be checked, like closing questions. Some people seem way to jumpy on the close button. Also downvotes seem a little out of control with people downvoting questions they do not agree with.
Additionally one or two reversed decisions does not mean much. But if a moderator/high rep user is having multiple decisions reversed over a period of time (say 10 in any month or something) that may merit some looking at. Nothing beats having a database of that information available for the querying. If the community decides that someone closing questions is wrong 50 times in a month, then that person probably should not have the ability to close questions anymore.....
This would also assign more personal accountability because I see many people jumping on the bandwagon rather than thinking for themselves. Once a question is marked possible duplicate it is often closed even if looking at the link the question is not really a an exact duplicate. All it takes is 5 yeses even if a bunch of people looking do not agree.... Similarly down voting because you disagree is childish but people do it. This is a fair on topic question about the stackexchange sites and yet look at the low score.