Climate and environmental challenges in the Anthropocene adversely affect the ecological integrity of mosaic landscapes, jeopardizing food security, livelihoods, climate resilience, and the provision of ecosystem services. Similarly, there are concerns about persistent poverty, inequality, and the exclusion of marginalized people from land use and decision-making. Hence, the growing call to deal with these social and environmental issues holistically at the landscape level through inclusive multi-stakeholder approaches.This special issue on Spatial tools for integrated and inclusive landscape governance is a follow-up to Environmental Management 62(1), titled 'From Synergy to Complexity: The Trend Toward Integrated Value Chain and Landscape Governance' (Ros-Tonen et al. 2018). This time, we focus specifically on spatial tools used to enhance multistakeholder engagement in integrated landscape governance to achieve greater inclusivity. With spatial tools, we mean mapping, 3D modeling, and place-based scenario-building processes employed to achieve governance or management objectives (McCall and Dunn 2012;Willemen et al. 2014). Participatory (geo)spatial tools such as participatory geographical systems (PGIS) and participatory mapping specifically aim to enhance stakeholder engagement and collaboration on spatial questions while empowering the least powerful among them by uncovering their views and claims (Ros-Tonen et al. 2021, this issue). The paper by Ros-Tonen et al. situates the use of participatory spatial tools in debates on integrated landscape governance and inclusive development. In doing so, the authors add some * Mirjam A. F. Ros-Tonen