# Government environmental regulation and farmers' engagement in traditional folk practices: the mediating roles of ecological cognition and social norms

**Authors:** Qing Wu, Jiaxiao Feng, Xiaoshi Liu, Yanli Huang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1704337 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This study examines how government environmental regulations affect farmers' participation in traditional folk practices in rural China, focusing on the roles of social norms and ecological awareness.

## Contribution

The study reveals that incentive-based regulations and social norms significantly influence participation, while ecological cognition can hinder it.

## Key findings

- Incentive-based regulation significantly increases farmers' willingness to participate in traditional practices.
- Social norms, both descriptive and injunctive, strongly influence participation willingness in rural communities.
- Ecological cognition negatively affects participation and mediates the impact of coercive regulation.

## Abstract

As an important carrier of cultural identity and community cohesion in rural Chinese society, traditional folk activities often generate tensions with modern ecological protection goals due to their resource-intensive characteristics. This study takes the millennium-old “Firecracker Lion Dance” activity in Deqing County, Guangdong Province, as a research case to explore how government environmental regulation influences farmers' willingness to participate in the Sustainable Firecracker-Lion Dance Custom, with a particular focus on the mediating roles of social norms and ecological cognition.

Based on 423 valid samples collected through fieldwork from 2022 to 2024, a structural equation model was constructed to systematically examine the differential regulatory pathways of incentive-based and coercive environmental regulation on farmers' participation in traditional folk practices, as well as the mediating roles of ecological cognition and social norms.

The results show that incentive-based regulation significantly enhances farmers' willingness to participate through motivational mechanisms (β = 0.229, p < 0.001), whereas coercive regulation shows no significant effect. Social norms exert significant positive effects on participation willingness (descriptive norms: β = 0.167, p < 0.001; injunctive norms: β = 0.238, p < 0.001), reflecting the behavioral constraints of group identity and opinion orientation in rural acquaintance societies. Meanwhile, ecological cognition significantly inhibits participation willingness (β = −0.210, p < 0.001) and exhibits a negative mediating effect in the coercive regulation path.

This study provides deeper insight into that the effectiveness of environmental regulation in traditional folk practices depends less on regulatory intensity than on cultural compatibility. Social norms function as key cultural conduits that translate policy signals into behavioral acceptance, whereas ecological cognition may generate value tensions that constrain participation. The results of this study offer theoretical validation and practical significance for the integrated governance of culture and ecology within the paradigm of ecological civilization.

## Full text

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## References

59 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832906/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832906