If you are born in any of the 50 US states, you are a full US citizen (e.g. can become a US president).
If you are born in one of the US territories (e.g. Puerto Rico) you are a US national (i.e. can get a US passport) but you are not a full US citizen (e.g. cannot become US president)
It is called "birthright" when one acquires citizenship based on their place of birth.
Basically, a natural born Filipino citizen is a person born of Filipino parents, the birth occurring in Philippine territories (including Philippine Embassies).
No, citizenship is not given to parents based on their child's place of birth.
you are the one who voluntare to loss your citizenship
Birth in the US territories,Birth abroad to a US citizen parent,Naturalization as a US citizen after legally living in the US for 5 years.
You are a citizen at birth. In some cases you may hold dual citizenship based on where you were born, the citizenship of your parents and the laws of where you live. In that case one normally has to decide on citizenship when one reaches the age of 18 or majority depending on the laws.
A birth certificate shows citizenship.
A birth certificate confirms that a person was born on a specific day at a specific location. It can be used to prove citizenship and identification.
No, not in the United States. In the US, a voter registration card is not acceptable proof of identity or of citizenship. The only acceptable proofs of citizenship in the US are usually these:"Enhanced" driver's licenseUS passport bookletUS passport cardOriginal birth certificate (if born in the US or its territories)Naturalization papers
Depending on the year you were born (and which US territory you were born in), you may be granted US citizenship at birth. For Puerto Rico, that year is 1941. The only US territories which do not grant natural-born citizenship are American Samoa and Swains Island.
The three types of citizenships are: Citizenship by birth Citizenship by descent Citizenship by naturalization
yes