Only if you have open adoption and this is decided between you and the parents. Legally you no longer have any rights to the child. When the child is adult you can try contacting her/him to see if they are interested but as long as he/she is a minor you can not contact them. It would be breaking the adoption agreement you signed.
He has the right to sign the birth certificate. Apart from that he has no right at the birth. The mother is the patient and she decides what goes.
Here in the Philippines, a mother can not just name any person as the father of her child in the Birth Certificate. They will look for a marriage contract as their reference when you named your child under his/her father's surname. Or if not married, they let the father fill up the Affidavit of Acknowledgement/Admission of Paternity at the back of the Birth Certificate.
A father cannot, period as it's an issue for the courts. As for the mother, she has the universal right to abandon her child under the Safe Haven laws.
Yes, the mother has a right to abort her responsibility for the child at any time, and the father will still be obligated to pay.
No, he has no right to decide over her body at all and has no legal right to decide over the child until the child is born and paternity has been established.
he has every right to the child as you do. Meaning if you want to do something with the child you need his permission.
You have the right to return the child as agreed. This is not the time to prove yourself the better parent. Also, if the child is young, the mom is where it needs to be.
you need to sit down with your mom and tell her that you know it was a mistake to have sex, but you want to make it right. tell her that every child deserves to have a father and it's realy important to you that you see the birth of your child. ask her how she would have felt to give birth to you, but never see you.
he has the right to fight for custody of the child involved but in the end depending on the situation the mother would be granted soul custody unless the mother is less fit than the father to raise the child
no
No unless he adopted the child no
You have the right to file for a change of custody with the court. You will have to present convincing evidence that the child's mother is unfit to retain custody of the child. Frankly: It is a stiff burden of proof to overcome to convince the court to remove a child from its mother's custody.