The American would have to obtain a work visa in the particular EU country of choice in order to work. The popular VISA WAIVER program only allows for a 3-month tourist (no work is allowed).
Once the American girlfriend obtains citizenship in an EU country (UK might be the best bet), then both she and boyfriend may live and work in any EU country without restriction.
If you marry your British boyfriend, he does not automatically become an American citizen, and you do not automatically become a British citizen. You both have the right to live in each other's country, but you must file paperwork to do so. Citizenship is not automatic.
The British government allows dual citizenship. However, the government of the other country might not allow this thus force you to renounce British citizenship if you want to become a citizen of their country.
Depends on the citizenship of your parents. Being on an American airplane does not bestow citizenship.
No. He was born with dual citizenship British/American, his British citizenship was transferred to Kenyan when Kenya became independent and he lost his Kenyan citizenship at age 23 because he didn't renounce his American citizenship (Kenya doesn't allow dual citizenship). So currently and since age 23 he holds citizenship in only one country--The United States of America.
yes
If you have a parents that had british citizenship you are eligible for a british passport. Otherwise you have to either marry someone with british citizenship or stay in the country for a certain amount of years (can't remember how many) which is called "naturalization".
Dual citizenship or dual nationality is allowed in the UK. This means you can be a British citizen and also a citizen of another country. Not every country will grant dual citizenship.
He is Mexican and American (has dual citizenship).
No you do not.The only person that doesn't have citezenship in America is the person from overseas.Another answer:Marriage to a foreign citizen does not affect one's own citizenship. If the new spouse wishes to obtain US citizenship, the laws of the home country determine whether or not that individual either gets dual citizenship or loses the original citizenship. For example, if a bride from New Zealand marries an American, she may gain US citizenship and retain her New Zealand citizenship. If a Chinese bride seeks US citizenship, though, China will not permit her to retain her Chinese citizenship.
Yes. Citizenship is not lost unless your mother chose another country of citizenship after she became over 18. Adults are not allowed dual citizenship.
The fundamental issue is that Britain did not recognize the American citizenship of former British subjects. The British argued that once a person is a British subject (usually by birth in Britain), that person remains a British subject in perpetuity and cannot shed that citizenship by becoming a naturalized American citizen. As a result, the British navy felt that any former Briton on an American ship was dodging his duty to participate in the defense of his country (the UK) against Napoleonic France. As is the case with any draft dodger, they should be brought and forced to serve. Of course, the US government objected since it considered these individuals to be US citizens and not UK citizens.
I don't think so, unless the child was born on American soil (actually in America, an American territory, American military installation, or American embassy).