A evolução legislativa na proteção de dados pessoais no brasil e na união europeia.
Resumo
The study analyzes legislative developments in the protection of personal data in Brazil and
the European Union, highlighting the General Data Protection Law (LGPD) and the General
Data Protection Regulation (GDPR or GDPR), respectively. Data protection has emerged as a
central topic in the debate on privacy and rights in the digital age. The general objective of
this work was to carry out a comparative analysis between data protection legislation in Brazil
and the EU, aiming to understand convergences and divergences in the development and
implementation of regulations. The methodology used was a bibliographical research with a
qualitative approach and descriptive objective. 15 theoretical references published in the last 5
years were analyzed, predominantly scientific articles. The search focused on the Scielo,
DOAJ and BDTD databases. Thematic analysis was used in 3 axes: foundations of laws,
comparison between legal diplomas and critical aspects in application. The results observed,
both LGPD and GDPR made progress in guaranteeing privacy and informational selfdetermination, although important asymmetries persist between the Brazilian and European
contexts. The study reveals that the laws share principles, but differ in the severity of
administrative sanctions and the degree of institutionalization of data protection bodies. It is
concluded that the effectiveness of the LGPD still requires further investigation. New studies
could investigate challenges and impacts of Brazilian law, in addition to the interconnection
between legal systems in this essential area of digital law.
Keywords: Data protection. Privacy. General Data Protection Law. General Data Protection
Regulation. Digital rights.