This research aims to analyze, through the Decolonial Turn, the effectiveness of the Principle of Human Dignity for historically subaltern individuals in Brazil. Thus, it became necessary to understand the historical process of colonization of Latin America and its consequent domination of Amerindian peoples. Therefore, the teachings formulated by Immanuel Wallerstein were categorically used to understand the inconsistencies in the functioning of the modern world-system, presented since the theological and scientific clash between Las Casas and Sepulveda. Furthermore, to understand the Decolonial Turn, the research used researchers within the spectrum of subalternity, for example: Catherine Walsh, Frantz Fanon, Enrique Dussel, Walter Mignolo. Through the contributions of the researchers, it was possible in this research to present a historical-social panorama of how colonialism was established in the legal-normative sphere, and, finally, reflections on the principle of human dignity constructed on the basis of decolonial reinterpretation for better adequacy with the real needs of Latin American individuals, especially in Brazil. To this end, the qualitative method was used, with a bibliographic survey of productions related to decoloniality, legal colonialism and the principle of human dignity.
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