Nature-based solutions for meeting environmental and socioeconomic challenges in land management and development 1 | BACKGROUND Population growth and urbanization have brought people into direct conflict with many aspects of nature. This conflict has elicited important challenges such as climate change, ecosystem degradation, and increasing socioeconomic disasters from major natural hazards. As urban expansion subsumes rural landscapes, it co-opts available raw materials (e.g., food and energy), and in the process pushes life-sustaining ecosystem services to the limit (Kabisch et al., 2016;Kalantari, Ferreira, Keesstra, & Destouni, 2018). The ensuing changes in environmental conditions have enormous consequences for both people and places (Keesstra et al., 2018). Changes in climate and hydrology, for example, not only directly implicate societal well-being (flooding, sea level rise, weather-related disasters), but also have indirect implications on ecosystem processes, geophysical processes, biogeochemical cycles, and the general regulation of earth systems (Maes & Jacobs, 2017). Without a clear understanding of these implications and social-ecological interactions and feedbacks, it is impossible to