The programme equips students with the theoretical foundations and applied skills needed to protect contemporary information systems and communication networks. The curriculum is organised in three progressive layers:
By graduation, students are able to critically evaluate cybersecurity threats and risks and design appropriate countermeasures for ICT and cyber-physical systems; design and implement cryptographic techniques for data protection; evaluate operational cybersecurity and risk-management policies aligned with ethical and legal standards; apply forensic engineering principles to investigate incidents; and implement end-to-end security across wired, wireless, mobile and IoT networks.
Cybersecurity is one of the fastest-evolving fields in computer science and digital governance, driven by the continuous rise of cyber threats, the complexity of modern information infrastructures, the need for compliance with national and EU regulatory frameworks, and a documented shortage of qualified professionals. The programme directly responds to this demand by preparing graduates for roles such as:
The curriculum is also designed to prepare graduates for internationally recognized professional certifications and for postgraduate studies in the same field.
Drawing on the formal learning outcomes of the programme, students develop four complementary skill groups:
The programme is distinctive in its interdisciplinary breadth. Rather than treating cybersecurity as a narrow technical subfield, it deliberately combines:
This technical core sits within an American-style Liberal Education programme, mandatory for all students, that delivers academic writing, professional communication, character education, and electives across five thematic clusters (Aesthetic Expression; Human Experience in Social, Historical and Cultural Contexts; Society and Community; Environment and Sustainability; The World of Business). Liberal education fosters critical thinking, ethical judgment, intercultural awareness, and the capacity to integrate knowledge across disciplines, capabilities that are increasingly essential for cybersecurity professionals working at the complex intersection of technology, organisations, and society.
The international dimension is further reinforced by the academic supervision of Roger Williams University (Rhode Island, USA), accredited by NECHE, which gives students access to an internationally recognised degree and to study-abroad and mobility opportunities, while operating in compliance with Greek Law 5094/2024 and Bologna Process principles. High-achieving students may also join the International Honors Program (IHP), an embedded interdisciplinary track requiring a cumulative index of 3.5/4.0.
Hands-on, applied learning is built into the programme through several complementary mechanisms:
Together, these elements give graduates a balanced profile of theoretical depth, applied technical capability, professional readiness, and exposure to state-of-the-art technologies, a combination that the field's evolution increasingly demands.