No. It would mostly depend on where YOU were born.
Only if at least one of your parents holds a Mexican citizenship.
Yes. You must be Mexican by birthright (e.g. born in Mexican soil) and have one or both parents of Mexican citizenship.
No. A baby born in the United States is a citizen of the United States no matter where he/she subsequently moves.
you will get the same citizenship as your parents
yes the child can get citizenship of Canada eventhough he born for pakistanees.
The citizenship of a baby born on a plane, or on a cruise ship, is the same as that of their parents.
If your parents were US citizens when you were born- you automatically are a US citizen. The US embassy should have given you documents stating your citizenship during the time you were born. This is what my sister did.
Singer Tatiana Palacious Chapa was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania on December 12, 1968. Her parents are both natives of Mexico but she was born in the United States and has dual citizenship.
No. citizenship has to do with where you were born, and where your parents were born. It has nothing to do with marriage.
Only her grand-parents. The rest of her family was born in Texas; for example, her father was born at Corpus Christi and she was born in Lake Jackson.
Depends on the citizenship of your parents. Being on an American airplane does not bestow citizenship.
He is both Mexican and American. He has dual citizenship.