Bloch surface waves (BSWs) are surface electromagnetic waves excited at the interface between a truncated periodic dielectric multilayer and a surrounding medium. This particular solution to the Maxwell equations in stratified media has been known since the late 1970s. However, few studies have been conducted till now on the manipulation and control of BSW propagation over 2D surfaces of photonic structures. There are several advantages provided by BSW propagation on almost flat surfaces. Due to the use of dielectric materials, losses are very low, thus allowing the propagation of BSWs over long distances. Another advantage in using BSWs is the possibility of operating within a broad range of wavelengths by properly designing a suitable multilayered structure. Furthermore, since the maximum intensity associated with BSWs can be tuned on the surface, a strong field intensity increased by several orders of magnitude can be achieved and can thereby enhance the field close to the structure's surface. This tunable localized field confinement is particularly attractive in fluorescence biosensing. In the following, we will use an exemplary BSW-sustaining multilayer as a general platform suitable for manipulating and controlling BSW propagation on its surface in the spectral range of telecom wavelengths. Several 2D optical photonic devices can be implemented starting from an ultra-thin (~ λ /15) polymer layer spun on the multilayer, which can be subsequently shaped as desired. The presence of the polymer modifies the local effective refractive index, enabling a direct manipulation of the BSWs. We experimentally and theoretically demonstrate that BSWs can be diffracted, focused, coupled and made resonating by locally shaping the geometries of 2D photonic devices—such as lenses, prisms, gratings, bended waveguides and waveguide couplers—on the multilayer. One of the main advantages is that these 2D photonic devices can have arbitrary shapes, which are difficult to obtain in 3D. The strong point of the platform concept is that a thin-film multilayer enables standard-wafer-scale production. The top surface can be modified to customize a 2D micro-system by, e.g., e-beam writing, optical lithography, stamping or other replication techniques. Since a BSW can be considered as a 2D wave and it is bounded at the surface of the multilayer, near-field imaging is one of the preferred tools to directly monitor and characterize the near field produced on the structured multilayered surface mentioned above. A multi-heterodyne scanning near-field optical microscope (MH-SNOM) developed in our lab (EPFL-OPT) makes near-field characterization possible. The operation wavelength is in the near infrared range (1460 nm–1580 nm). A polarization-retrieval method is developed in this thesis to measure and characterize the near-field polarization response for arbitrary polarization- sensitive photonic nano-devices, such as photonic crystal microcavities, waveguides, thin films, nan