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23 answers

The mothers womb and the child would be a citizen of the country the mother is from.

2006-09-09 10:06:33 · answer #1 · answered by DEADGONE 4 · 2 1

If the baby was born over US land or territories the child would be an American. If the child born outside this and one of the parents is an American, the parents would have to submit paperwork for an Department of State - Certification of Birth Abroad. This would include if both parents are US citizens. Some countries do not give citizenship based on birth. Example: both parents US, baby born in Germany. You get certificate of birth but the baby has no citizenship.

2006-09-09 16:44:38 · answer #2 · answered by army_retired91 3 · 0 0

It comes from the act of love between a woman and a man that results in the fertilization of an ebrio.

I think you mean, what citizenship will the baby have. None, women in their 3rd trimester (past 7 monts) aren't allowed to flight.

2006-09-09 10:10:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The mother! (Bwa ha ha ha ha!) Seriously... most countries determine citizenship through the citizenship status of the birth mother. There are some also, that determine citizenship by where the baby is born. In that case of an international flight scenario, I've read that the baby is whatever citizenship the mother is.

2006-09-09 10:08:32 · answer #4 · answered by Mouse 1 · 0 0

All commercial planes and vessels are considered the territory of the country the plane or ship is registered with. If American airlines your American if Lufthansa your German. The parent can still keep the child a resident of the country native to the parent or make the kid have dual citizenship. Check with immigration as rules vary from country to country.

2006-09-13 07:16:01 · answer #5 · answered by brian L 6 · 0 0

Actually the baby is Elvis' kid....hahaha. Don't know, but that is an interesting Q. I think I would go with the parent's citizenship.

2006-09-09 10:54:07 · answer #6 · answered by Infierno! 2 · 0 0

Citizenship would be as the birth mother. Sorry your kid is still going to be a Yank even if its born north of the border!

2006-09-10 01:24:07 · answer #7 · answered by Pretorian 5 · 0 0

Generally speaking: Where the aircraft is registered. If over territorial water - the country over whose jurisdiction the plane is flying.

2006-09-09 10:19:08 · answer #8 · answered by thomasrobinsonantonio 7 · 1 0

It would be interesting on who would be the taxing authority or get drafting rights. The ones with the strongest claim would be the parents country.

2006-09-09 11:18:54 · answer #9 · answered by viablerenewables 7 · 0 0

Maybe it would depend what airline the baby is born on. Maybe if it was British Airways, the kid would be a Brit. Just guessing, don't know, but it is an interesting question.

2006-09-09 10:07:32 · answer #10 · answered by armywifetp 3 · 1 2

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