Assuming the parents have citizenship of their respective countries, it doens't matter where the child is born, it will have dual-citizenship, and will have to choose when they turn 18. Although I assume one, or both of the parents will change their citizenship at some point in those 18 years.
YES, if the father has retained his american citizenship,no problem. In fact you can have dual citizenship Canadian AND American.
THE BIG INDIAN IS THE MOTHER OF THE LITTLE INDIAN.. in the question said SON of the big Indian and the big Indian IS NOT THE FATHER of little Indian.. so the answer is MOTHER!
A person born in China to a Chinese parent is classed as a Chinese citizen. As one of the parents is American the child is entitled to claim dual-citizenship at a later date.
Yes her father was mixed his father was German and his mother was a southern African American.
Multiracial descendent. My mother is of Native American and Caucasian descent of my Grandfather's side of the family and African-American on my Grandmother's side of the family. As for my father, his mother was of Native American descent and his father was of African, Afro-Jamaican, and Dominican descent. So basically, if I am mixed with African, Indian, Afro-Jamaican, Dominican, and Caucasian descent, that means I am of an multiethnic background.
YES, if the father has retained his american citizenship,no problem. In fact you can have dual citizenship Canadian AND American.
You have an automatic American Citizenship as the father is an American citizen. It doesn't matter whether or not you are born on a military base or if your mother isn't a American citizen.
He is both Mexican and American. He has dual citizenship.
No- he is a native born American. His ancestry is neither from Indian nor American Indian. His father was from Kenya, his mother is of British ancestry.
No, her father was not Indian. He was an Albanian as was her mother.
It depends on the Indian Citizenship Law. If they give the instant citizenship to new born babies then the child have dual nationalities otherwise it is automatically gets the Canadian Citizenship.
The child would have dual citizenship; Canadian and American.
i am a Nepali but my mother was an Indian before marriage...so is there any provision through which i can take Indian citizenship..i am ready to renunciate nepal's citizenship for that..
The child will have dual citizenship in Canada and America. It depends on why the couple was in Germany. If he was stationed there for military reasons, the child will have no type of German citizenship.
It depends on what the countries laws on citizenship are. In Obama's case he is recognized as only American by the U.S. government. But if Kenya allows dual citizenship he may also be both Kenyan and American.
Only if you are born in the US.
Posey is biracial. Her mother is African-American and her father is Italian and Irish.