Democracy. People vote for the government they want.
The above answer is overly simplistic. Palestine is currently divided into two separate operational governments. Hamas rules the Gaza Strip in a way similar to Military Junta. There are no planned elections and the government is directly controlled by parts of the militant organization. The West Bank is an Illiberal Democracy. People can vote for politicians, but when the Palestinian people voted against Fatah, like in 2006, the Fatah party refused to validate the results and step down. Therefore a more accurate answer would be "Military Junta in Gaza" and "Illiberal Democracy in the West Bank".
All-Palestine Government ended in 1959.
All-Palestine Government was created in 1948.
Palestine liberation organization
What you mean by interruption of the Roman government is unclear.
what was the name of the series of invasions of palestine launched by christians from europe
Yes
they are illiterate people and their government is communist
The modern State of Israel came into existence in 1948. In 1940, the area where Israel predominantly sits (excluding the Golan Heights) was called the British Mandate of Palestine. The Mandate of Palestine was not a country, but a colony of the British Empire. What made a mandate different from a colony was that the British had an obligation to help the people living in the territory to form their own government and facilitate independence. In the specific case of the Mandate of Palestine, they were required to do this for the Jews and the Arabs together.
The Jordan is a river in Palestine/Israel/the Lebanon.
President Obama said that The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli and palestine agresions towards each other.
The Roman Empire ruled Palestine, but the Romans allowed the Jewish priests to take care of the relgous matters of the Jews.
Yes, Palestine is considered a formal region due to its well-defined boundaries, distinct cultural characteristics, and recognized government institutions, despite its complex political status.