In the US, no.
No, your child will not be emancipated because she is pregnant and her parents still have to support her until she is.
There is no nationwide law for when child support stops.
Child support stops when the child turns 18 or earlier if a courts rules as such. Child support may be for longer if the child is in college.
No, they are separate issues. If the custodial parent stops visitations they would be in violation of a court order. The custodial parent must address the child support arrears as a separate matter by filing a contempt order with the court.
No. Visitation and child support are 2 separate issues and the child (although now adult) does not have to see the parent. The parent is always obligated to support the child anyway. Child support usually stops from age 18 though but in some states it can be prolonged when the child is in college.
That is dependent on state laws and whether he stopped paying due to be denied access to the children, which happens in 60% of the cases.
Unless it is otherwise stipulated in a divorce final judgment, child support can be terminated when the child reaches the age of 18. In Florida, paying support generally stops at age 18. However, it depends on what your support order says. The age may be different for other states. You should read your support order carefully to understand when to stop paying support. If you've missed paying some of the support in past years, you may have to keep paying until you've paid off everything you missed. For more information take a look at: http://www.florida-court-forms.net/florida-child-support.html
When she is 18, unless she is disabled or handicapped. If so, then it stops at 23 yrs of age.
Yes, a mother South Africa can get an arrest warrant for a father living in another country if he stops paying for child support.
child support stops at age 21 in NY
it stops
Some actions of minors can stop child support, though this can vary according to state law. If the child is incarcerated, child support to the custodial parent stops, but support may have to be paid to the state youth penal system. Also, if the child takes action to become emancipated, support stops.