Answer:
1) Meanings and values of land are socially constructed and contested;
2) land systems exhibit complex behaviors with abrupt, hard-to-predict changes;
3) irreversible changes and path dependence are common features of land systems;
4) some land uses have a small footprint but very large impacts;
5) drivers and impacts of land-use change are globally interconnected and spill over to distant locations;
6) humanity lives on a used planet where all land provides benefits to societies;
7) land-use change usually entails trade-offs between different benefits—"win–wins" are thus rare;
8) land tenure and land-use claims are often unclear, overlapping, and contested;
9) the benefits and burdens from land are unequally distributed; and
10) land users have multiple, sometimes conflicting, ideas of what social and environmental justice entails.
Step-by-step explanation: