Depends on where YOU were born. Also, did the US born parents become naturalized in a new country?
No. It would mostly depend on where YOU were born.
Mia Farrow 1945 - actress father is Australian born in the U.S. with dual citizenship Nicole Kidman 1967- actress both parents are Australians; raised in Australia born in the U.S. with dual citizenship
Some countries will claim the child has dual citizenship (see links below), however, while the US does recognize dual citizenship, any child born to US parents ANYWHERE is considered solely a US citizen
US has not stopped dual citizenship. It was banned in the 19th century, however, due to changes in law, it was again revised in the 20th century. It is only allowed at considering certain circumstances. America considers many factors before issuing it to the individual irrespective of the country born. Individual's citizenship is based upon the parent's origin country. Suppose a child is born outside US, parents are US citizens, then the child will be given dual citizenship one from the country born and US citizenship based upon parents. Naturalization is also common nowadays for getting dual citizenship.
I think that if your father was (and/or still is) a US citizen, then you are also a US citizen no matter where you were born. It should be rather easy to get an american passport in the US embassy or consulate in the phillipines for you. As for your mother, I believe that she has to apply for a US visa or "green card" based on her marriage to your father who was/is a US citizen, or thru your US citizenship if you are over 21 years old.
According to the US, she or he would have American citizenship only. The Bolivian government's citizenship policy would decide if the child had access to dual citizenship. Dual here is spelled with an "a," not an "e." Duel with an "e" means a fight between two people.
The person is either born in the US or born to parents who are US citizen outside of the US (can then apply for dual citizenship) or has been granted naturalized citizenship under the required procedure established by the US immigration laws.
The US recognizes dual citizenship.
Dame Elizabeth has dual citizenship in the US and UK. She was born in England to American parents.
Yes. Several ways. * You're a citizenship of the UK and become a naturalized citizen in the US, or vice versa. * Your father (or mother) was born in the UK and you were born in US. Parents are not diplomats. * Both of your parents were born in the US, you are born in the UK. * One of your parents were born in the US, lived there for at least 5 years after age 14, married, then had a child in the UK.
It depends where his parents are from. If a child has US citizenship,the US does not require him to give up the US citizenship ever. But, let's say the parents are from Japan, government of Japan requires him to choose between Japanese or American nationality and give up one of them.
No.