Citizenship?
Answer:
It depends on the laws of the country.
If the woman was on holiday in the US, the child would get US citizenship due to the laws there. If she was on holiday in the UK, for example, the child would NOT get British citizenship unless one of the parents was British.
We have friends who live here in England near us (I'm an American in London) whose twin daughters were born here. Their mom is French, so they have French citizenship, and their dad is American, so they have American citizenship. But the girls, who live here and will probably have a London accent, do not have British citizenship. They can apply for it later.
Funny old world, eh?
Nope!
In some countries yes. It depends on which country she was in.
It depends on country, because there are some other countries that have that kind of law.
the decision is in the kid's hand.
ONLY IN AMERICA, that's why they come here by purpose.
Yes she will be given a birth right in that country
It depends on each individual country's laws. In the UK, no.
not so. It depends what her status are in this country.
yes!
No matter in which country. The child will be given automatic rights for citizenship but in different countries the period your child have to wait for it varies
It depends on the country. Some countries have citizenship jus soli, that is, by place of birth (if you are born in that country, you are a citizen). Other countries have citizenship based on paternity. It means that the child is the citizen of the country of which parents are citizens, and not of the country where it was born.
US has citizenship jus soli, France - by parents' citizenship, for example.
P.S. They do not give visas to pregnant women to go and "travel".
In some countries a cuckoo can become legally an eagle
The immigration information post by website user , MyTend.com not guarantee correctness
