There are two effective ways to gain U.S. citizenship at birth: have either (or both) of the parents be U.S. citizens, or be born on designated incorporated U.S. sovereign territory. The first method is sufficient for citizenship according to current U.S. law (US Code Title 8, Section 1401), and the second method is proscribed according to the 14th Amendment. In both cases, the child qualifies as a "natual-born" citizen, and is eligible to run for the Presidency.
As the question stands, the answer is an obvious YES, as the mere fact that a parent was a U.S. citizen provides citizenship to the child, and the location of the birth is irrelevant.
On a related note, however, as foreign U.S. military bases are NOT considered sovereign U.S. territory (unlike U.S. Embassies which are, though Consular Offices are not), children born on-base are NOT eligible for automatic U.S. citizenship via the 14th Amendment. Thus, if a foreign worker gave birth at the U.S. base's hospital, the child would not be a U.S. citizen.
If both parents were US citizens and married before the birth, the the child is automatically a US citizen; birthplace is irrelevant. However, if only one parent was a US citizen at the time of the birth , it gets a little trickier. It depends on when the child was born (laws change), however since 1952, if the couple was married before the birth and the father meets residency requirements in the US then the child is a US citizen. Your best bet is to consult an attorney who specializes in this.
Read more: Is_a_child_born_in_Mexico_a_US_citizen_if_the_child's_father_is_a_US_citizen
Basic answer is yes. The child will definitely be a US citizen, and possibly a citizen of the country where the birth took place.
If a US citizen gives birth in a foreign country, the child IS a US citizen. In many countries (depending on where you are), the child would have Dual Citizenship.
Yes However birth needs to be recorded with US embassy in the country of birth.
Then they are legally a citizen of both the us and where ever they were born
"In most cases, one is a U.S. citizen if both of the following are true: # Both parents were U.S. citizens at the time of the child's birth # At least one parent lived in the United States prior to the child's birth." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_nationality_law
Yes, if it is a reciprocating country
The child is an American citizen because he or she was born here. The foreign mother is not. Presumably this is because it would create an easy way to obtain citizenship if the government allowed foreign women to become citizens just because they gave birth in our country.
Only if the birth is registered in that country's U.S. embassy. If not, he can still be a citizen if father lived in the US a certain amount of years, and a certain amount of years past a specific age ( the actual years and age depends on the father's year of birth). If that fails,
Her child is definitely a US citizen which the baby's birth certificate proves it. but the mother cant apply for residency.
I don't think so, unless the child was born on American soil (actually in America, an American territory, American military installation, or American embassy).
It depends on how it is done. For instance, if the child was already in the US illegally, then the child has to get a green card first, and then qualify for citizenship.
Any US citizen is free to enter the US at any time. However, this US citizen child who hasn't lived in the country will need to have some documentation which proves his or her citizenship, such as a passport or birth certificate.
The child is a citizen of both countries, since it was born on Canadian soil, but from an American citizen.
This depends on a number of factors such as:Which country the birth occurred in?Nationality of the mother?Immigration status while in the country where the birth occurred?Does the mother want the child to have her citizenship?In the US for instance, the nationality of the mother and her married state have nothing to do with the child's nationality. The baby would be a US Citizen. However, the mother might decide to register the birth as a foreign birth abroad and not claim US citizenship for the child.Other countries like Germany make it very difficult to get citizenship even if the child was born in Germany.
Yes
No! If the child is born in another country and not on a military base, the child is a citizen of the country to wit it is born in. The parent will have to fill the proper paperwork to get the child it's US status.