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Yes, your parent can decide who you visit or see especially if you are still a minor. Concerned parents do not want you to hang around with the wrong kind of people. That's why most parents suggest to meet the person that your visiting or seeing.
If they have parental permission. The parents are responsible for the child. They can decide where the child lives.
As long as you are a minor you can not decide legally where to live.
{| |- | Certainly you can as long as you have the parents permission. Until they reach the age of majority the parent is responsible for the minor. But the parents can decide were the best place for a child to live is. It does not relieve them of responsibility for the child. |}
No, there is still a parent left with custody. And custody can never be willed. That is for the court to decide. The ones in the will can ask for custody but it is up to the court.
The parents are responsible for the minor. They get to decide where they live. They have to provide shelter, but they don't have to do it in their own home.
No, the minor parent is.
Not if she is a minor. She is only emancipated regarding her baby and her own health. The father has a legal right to see his child but not the mother until she is 18. Parents have the right to decide who their minor is seeing.
She is still a minor and you decide over her just like before but you do NOT decide over her child. Only she is allowed to decide over her child before and after birth. Being pregnant is not emancipating her.
If you live in the US… It depends on what rights you're talking about. Minor parents have parental rights over their own children (for example, you get to decide rather or not you want to voluntarily give the child up for adoption). However, the minor parent is still subject to the control and authority of their own parents, because having a child does not emancipate a minor.
Having a child does not emancipate a minor (they don't gain an adult rights), so until you turn 18, your parents decide where you live.
No. Since she's still a minor, her parents decide where she lives. The fact that she has a child is irrelevant.