The typical recourse for a user in a situation like this is to contact the team for assistance. When contacting the team, you need to show that you have understood how the site works and are capable of learning from your mistakes and asking better questions. What happens with your account depends on the situation, but usually this can mean either disassociating the absolute worst questions from your account so they no longer contribute to the ban, or if your account is really unsalvageable, they might remove it altogether so you can create a new one.
If a user starts posting good questions on a new account on their own accord, then I guess we'll just allow them to use their new account. The purpose of the question ban, ultimately, is to help users understand how our site works, and if we manage to help them and/or they manage to figure it out, their future positive contributions will be more than welcome.
Most users, however, simply don't learn. If they create new accounts to circumvent the ban only to continue posting low-quality questions, that's where we step in in order to keep them out.
Needless to say, all the other rules regarding having access to more than one account applies. For example, if either account has enough rep to cast votes, it should not be used to vote on the other account.