Yes American citizenship law states that if one of your parent is a citizen so is the child -- Although if you are born outside the U.S., depending on the laws of that country, you could be considered a citizen of that country and you will have to file naturalization papers once you (or rather your parents) returned home to verify you are indeed an American citizen born to American citizens.
The child is an American citizen if the child was born on American soil. The child should be able to stay in the US with the father. Unless the mother takes the child with her. There could be a custody dispute between the mother and father, it should be what is best for the child.
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).
A mulatto is of African decent, but they aren't 100% African American. A mulatto is the child of one black parent and one white parent.
Child support for illegal children can be difficult. A court order is required to enforce child support payments, and this depends on the parent being a legal immigrant with a legal job to collect from. If a illegal child is born of a US citizen or naturalization, the child is no longer considered illegal.
A non citizen can gain status through an American child who is at least 21 years of age. Once the child turns 21, the child can file a petition for the non citizen parent.
According to American law, if one or both of the parents are American citizens, the child is also an American citizen. If the child is also eligible for Chinese citizenship (such as one parent being a Chinese citizen), at a certain age the child will be asked to choose citizenship of one country or the other.
The child of a US citizen is considered a US citizen.
If the child is a legal citizen they go to the closest legal relative, if there is no one to take the child they go into foster care. If the child is not a legal citizen they will be deported with the parent. If the child is a legal citizen and they aren't registered in school they can be deported with the parent as well.
Do you mean to ask if the child is a US citizen? Depends on how long the US citizen parent has been resident in the US. Need five years after age 14 to qualify.
No, to be born an American citizen you have to be born on American soil. Such as America or an American embassy. I believe that you only have to have one parent from the country in order to access some kind of resident visa and or long term citizenship.
IT DOES NOT MATTER WHAT THE PARENT'S ARE,IT ONLY MATTER'S WHERE THE CHILD IS BORN. IF THE CHILD IS BORN IN THE U.S. THEN THE CHILD IS A U.S. CITIZEN
The American parent should apply for a "certificate of birth abroad" for the child at the nearest US mission. The certificate acts as a certificate of US citizenship.
The child is a citizen of both countries, since it was born on Canadian soil, but from an American citizen.
Yes, they can and are. Canada will recognize the child naturally because they were born on Canadian soil, and to a Canadian parent. The child will also inherit the US Citizenship of the American Parent, although the Parent will have to declare the child to the U.S. Consulate showing their proof of citizenship as well as the child's Canadian birth certificate.
Yes, he will be treated as "US Citizen born abroad"
Who is consider a legal Citizen when one parent is from another country and one is American born -- child is born in a possesion?