When you reach the legal age of majority for your state (usually 18, but in a few states it's higher) you can--until then, no.
Custody, not parental rights.
She will not have any custody to give since she no longer have parental rights. The father have to go to court to petition for custody as soon as he has established paternity through a DNA test.
In general, parental rights are terminated either preparatory to an adoption, or after a trial in which it is determined that the parent is unfit. In any case, termination of parental rights does not, in itself, terminate child support.
Get a lawyer. You have a couple of ways to assert your parental rights.
Yes
In general, parental rights are terminated either preparatory to an adoption, or after a trial in which it is determined that the parent is unfit. In any case, termination of parental rights does not, in itself, terminate child support.
no, or after see links below
Fathers with parental rights are not always listed on the birth certificate.
Yes, but only if the birth father's parental rights have been terminated by the courts.
A father has parental rights regardless of marital status most states.
The birth certificate is not something that gives him parental rights, he have to go to court for that and prove it by DNA test. A birth certificate does not require DNA so it does not hold up in court. So yes, if he has gone to court he has rights.
No, in order to have a step parent adoption, the birth father's parental rights must be permanently terminated.