Yes
If one parent is Catholic, either the father or the mother, it makes little difference as the Church requires that the child be brought up as a Catholic.
The amount of hours with each parent, minus time at school. see link
If the child is a legal citizen they go to the closest legal relative, if there is no one to take the child they go into foster care. If the child is not a legal citizen they will be deported with the parent. If the child is a legal citizen and they aren't registered in school they can be deported with the parent as well.
the parent can sue the school, and every one involved who is supposed to keep the child safe and free from harm.
Roman Catholic AnswerA child must have at least one parent who is practicing their religion and willing to bring the child up in the faith to be baptized. A priest would normally refuse baptism if there is no certainly whatsoever that the child will be brought up in the faith. It would not be fair to the child.
Officially, a child can only have a Catholic christening if at least one parent is a Catholic, as the priest needs to have a "well-founded hope" that the child will be brought up in the Catholic Faith. No, not really. Some religions do have rules but normally, the is no.
No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.No one was "entitled" to an education in ancient Rome. An entitlement program was unknown, at least for schooling. If a parent wanted their child to be educated he sent the kid to school and paid the teacher. The wealthier the parent, the better and more highly educated his child could become.
I would certainly question the violation of privacy rights by any school that used email correspondence. A "girlfriend" who is not the biological parent. Has no legal or ethical right to information of minor children. If the a parent gave permission, and the school released such information, the other biological parent has every right to object. And the legal right to have it stopped.
I can't answer this question accuratly, because I don't know which church you're refering to. But ultimatly it's the child's decision to be baptized, and no matter what the parents' situations are, it can't stop the child from being baptized.Catholic Answer:Yes, parents who are not married can have their child baptized. The Church does not punish the child for the sins of the parents.
The difference between a biological parent and an adoptive parent is that the biological parent is the one who is related to the child by blood and the adoptive parent is the one that raised the child.
One should be through with high school before becoming a natural parent.
Not on taxes no. The parent the child lives with has the main right to claim the child. But if that parent can't or doesn't want to then the other parent can