“…Given the complex connectivity of global markets and ecological systems, it is challenging to directly measure these transferred or displaced impacts. However, recent research has identified displaced environmental impact across a range of natural resource policies, including those governing fisheries management (Chan & Pan, 2016;Helvey, Pomeroy, Pradhan, Squires, & Stohs, 2017;Rausser, Hamilton, Kovach, & Stifter, 2009), biodiversity protection (Lenzen et al, 2012;Weinzettel, Hertwich, Peters, Steen-Olsen, & Galli, 2013), forest preservation (Gan & McCarl, 2007;Mayer, Kauppi, Angelstam, Zhang, & Tikka, 2005;Meyfroidt & Lambin, 2009), and land use (Kastner, Kastner, & Nonhebel, 2011;Meyfroidt, 2017). Despite growing evidence (Box 1), there has been relatively little effort within and across resource sectors to adequately integrate this work into policy discussions in a manner that transcends disciplinary, sectoral, or other boundaries.…”