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​​A​​bout the course

 

The VI Maritime Security Course, organised by the Atlantic Centre, will take place from 01-04 June 2025, in the Ponta Delgada, Azores, under the topic "Blue Crime: Transnational Challenges in the Atlantic".​​​​​

​This annual event is organised in partnership with the Maritime Analysis and Operation Center- Narcotics [MAOC(N)], the Luso-American development foundation (FLAD), the Portuguese Judiciary Police, the National Defence Institute of Portugal, the Gulf of Guinea Maritime Institute, in Accra, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the United Nations Institute for Training and Research among other partners.​

  • VI Maritime Security Course​​​

    Registrations will open soon

    Should you wish to be contacted for future editions or to receive information, please correspond with the Atlantic Centre at atlantic_centre@defesa.pt

    ​​This will ensure that you are kept informed about upcoming events, updates, and any relevant details pertaining to future editions.

  • ​​The course aims to provide the appropriate conceptual tools to better grasp the complexity of multidimensional maritime challenges, as well as to explore how to best strengthen capacities and foster regional resilience, while promoting solutions that enhance social cohesion and advance respect for international law, human rights, and dignity in maritime-bound contexts.​​

    The following eligibility criteria should be abided:​

    • Staff officers from all services of the armed f​orces (OF3-OF5) or civilians equivalent, including high-level public officials, researchers, academics, NGO and IO staff and practitioners.
    • Nationals from or working in an Atlantic country.
    • Proven relevant experience in the field of maritime security and related areas.

    The Atlantic Centre strongly encourages a balanced participation of men and women in its activities.​

    Documents to be submitted:​​

    • CV
    • Application/Motivation letter from the candidate
    • The required documentation should be submitted on the registration form. The organizing committee, composed of one representative of each partner entity, will have the final decision regarding every participant.
    • The course will be taught entirely in English and the target audience will include military personnel, public servants, and high-level officials from Atlantic countries, with a previous background on maritime security issues or ongoing professional responsibilities related to such issues.


    A total of 30 slots will be made available. Support will be provided to participants in terms of accommodation and meals, throughout the duration of the course. Travel expenses and formalities to and from São Miguel Island, Azores, will be of the responsibility of each participant.

    ​​Trainers and guest speakers will be recruited and invited from partner countries and institutions, with different professional backgrounds to ensure diversity of profiles.

  • ​The Atlantic Centre has, since its foundation, sought to explore, study, and discuss overarching challenges that are collectively experienced across the Atlantic Basin. These themes must meet two criteria: they need to be multidisciplinary in content and multinational in form, reflecting both the complexity of Atlantic challenges and the diversity of actors required to address them. 

    Thus, and with the support of its signatory states, the Centre has designed and delivered courses on “Whole-of-Atlantic” issues. These have included Great Power Competition in the Atlantic (2023), Illegal Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (2024), and Climate Change and Security Challenges (2025). Building on this experience, for 2026, the Centre has proposed the theme “Blue Crime: Transnational Challenges in the Atlantic”.

     
    Blue Crime has emerged as a contemporary concept that encompasses a vast array of illegal activities both on and off shore. While its limits are still evolving and its boundaries are not always uniformly defined, the geopolitical space in which these crimes unfold is undisputed. Framing blue crime within the Atlantic context is therefore essential.
     
    The Atlantic Ocean is facing tangible pressures from multiple directions. These include, but are not limited to, IUU fishing, maritime piracy and armed robbery, illicit trafficking of narcotics and people, and environmental crimes occurring in increasingly complex operational environments.
    In addition, owing to the changing strategic landscape, it is difficult to deny the role of new technological developments in the criminal context, and the extent to which they can be used for illegal purposes. In this regard, the role of non-state actors leveraging new technologies to assert strategic disruption and to develop new ways to pursue illegal activities, remains both a challenge to traditional law enforcement, international law and an opportunity to develop novel operational paradigms for coastal (and inland) nations. Enhanced maritime domain awareness, improved interagency and cross-regional cooperation, and the integration of technological and intelligence-driven approaches are increasingly central to effective responses.
     
    Moreover, it is important to highlight that criminal flows at sea often traverse multiple jurisdictions, regulatory regimes, and levels of governance capacity. While there is substantial information available on specific blue crime, less is known about more recent intensifying trends, and how their impact asserts itself on the Atlantic geopolitical space.
     
    Combined, these layers encompass what we refer to as a novel blue crime dynamic that is intersected by different criminal activities across  the Atlantic’s strategic, economic, environmental, and human security landscape. The interconnected nature of some crimes further underlines that these subversive actions are not peripheral in their functional origin, geographic reach or cumulative effect. 
     
    The Atlantic is confronted with transnational maritime crime-related challenges on a yearly basis. In order to continue delivering timely, policy-relevant courses and research that tackles the concerns of the Atlantic Basin community, after having gathered the feedback of all 27 member-states,  the sixth edition of the Atlantic Centre Maritime Security Course (VI MSC) will be dedicated to the topic of “ Blue Crime, transnational challenges in the Atlantic”.
     
    This edition will be organised by the Atlantic Centre in partnership with the Maritime Analysis and Operation Center- Narcotics (MAOC(N)), the Luso-American development foundation (FLAD), the Portuguese Judiciary Police, the National Defence Institute of Portugal, the Gulf of Guinea Maritime Institute, in Accra, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the United Nations Institute for Training and Research among other partners.​

Última atualização: 03 de fevereiro de 2026

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