Yes he does, such as custody, visitation and support issues. As for Immigration, having a citizen child is no basis to get legal residency (at least not until the child is 21)
you did
Cesar Chavez
A Filipina married to an American has the right to live with her husband in the United States, apply for a green card or permanent residency, work in the US, have access to healthcare and education, and be protected under US laws. Additionally, she may have the right to petition for her family members to join her in the US under certain conditions.
No. They aren't citizens.
Last time I checked no. Even if you become a citizen of Mexico, you don't have all of the rights of native mexicans.
Land rights
Assuming you are an American citizen, your child definitely has the right to live in the states.
If he is not married to the mother, he has no assumed rights to the child even if she were a citizen, so the same challenges would remain in obtaining custody.
blacks rights to be treated as whites and other human beings instead of illegal aliens.
Julian Nava has written: 'The Mexican American in American history' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Mexican Americans 'Julian Nava' -- subject(s): Biography, Civil rights, Civil rights workers, Education, Educators, History, Juvenile literature, Mexican Americans, Politics and government, Statesmen
mutualistas
The White supremacist American Government was treating Mexican Americans as second-class citizens. Moreover, Mexican Americans faced threats of deportation, and they formed organizations and civil right groups to lobby for their rights as legitimate American citizens. The most popular organization that exerts considerable influence to date is the Mexican American Political Association (MAPA) that was founded in 1959.