If the parents are US citizens, then the child gets duel citizenship (citizenship in the country he/she is born in [depending on local laws], and US citizenship). Any person naturalized in the US or by American parents is a US citizen.
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.
Russian law says no to it, but I know a lot of people does have Russian and USA citizenship!
The Drifters.
Yes. My sister moved to Canada and now has duel citizenship. Many Americans with strong ties to places like Israel and Ireland have duel citizenship. Each country has their own laws. If you had a grandparent who was born in Ireland, then you are eligible for Irish citizenship.
US and UK allow Dual citizenship. A person can be a US citizen and a citizen of UK if he/she desires to. But if a person applies to get naturalized as a citizen of UK when he/she is already a US citizen, then it will lead to losing US citizenship.So a person can have US & UK citizenship as long he/she is not a naturalized citizen of UK.
Contact the nearest US consulate, go there and register your child's birth. The certificate they will give you will act as citizenship certificate. Then apply for your child's passport so that s/he can travel to the US with you too.
A person can lose their US citizenship by voluntarily renouncing it, committing treason, or serving in a foreign military.
If you are from the US, he wants to move there, and later apply for US citizenship: the answer is no. But if you are from a country which prevents its citizens from having another citizenship (e.g. Norway, Denmark, Finland, South Korea, and Japan), then he must renounce both these nationalities to apply for the one from your country.
Yes, a person can lose their US citizenship through voluntary renunciation, committing treason, or serving in a foreign military.
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.
Everyone who has ever changed their citizenship has been unpatriotic to their old country.