Abstract

In 1822, Brazil ceases to be a Portuguese colony when declaring its Independence. From then on, an effort began to build the Brazilian nation, identify its political-ideological foundations, form a state apparatus capable of managing the territory, create legislation and define citizenship criteria for its population. This whole process took place with the colonialist precepts, such as racism, so this work seeks to add the decolonial reading to the analysis of this period.

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