_______________________________________________ International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology Vol. 1, No. 2, December 2020 DOI: https://doi.org/10.18196/ijiep.v1i2.10011 The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self- Regulation of University Students in Uganda 1Musa Muwaga, 2Fuad Nashori*, 2Achmad Sholeh 1Department of Psychology, School of Arts and Social Sciences, Kampala University, Uganda 2Department of Psychology, Faculty of Psychology and Socio-Cultural Sciences, Universitas Islam Indonesia, Indonesia *Corresponding email: fuadnashori@uii.ac.id Citation: Muwaga, M., Nashori, F. & Sholeh, A. (2020). The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda. International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 75-88. DOI: https://doi.org/10.18196/ijiep.v1i2.10011 A R T I C L E I N F O A B S T R A C T Article history Received, 12/10/2020 Revised, 13/11/2020 Accepted, 08/12/2020 Most societies consider sexual self-regulation to represent a general temptation control mechanism, postponing gratification. This study aims to determine the social environment's impact on university students' sexual self-regulation in Uganda. The data were obtained using convenience technique sampling of undergraduate students at university "X" in Uganda. Students voluntarily completed the questionnaire in a regular classroom setting. The questionnaire elicited information regarding sexual regulative capacities like seeking accurate information from social environments like family, peer, and university environments. The data were analyzed using both univariate analyses (chi-square and analysis of variance and logistic regression. The results indicated that the social environment had a positive and significant relationship with sexual self-regulation and university students with a value of 1t1 ≥1.96, and factor loading≥0.50 was significant. These results should be considered by those working with university students in human sexuality and human development. This is an open access article under the CC–BY-SA license. Keywords Attitudes Sexual Self-Regulation Social Environment Religious Values University Students http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 76 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 INTRODUCTION According to the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF), adolescents can be categorized by three stages: 10-13 years old as early adolescents', 14-16 years old as middle adolescents', and 17-19 years old as late adolescents. Based on the developmental perspective, adolescence is a very challenging time with various conflicts. Physically, adolescents' bodies are getting mature, then, cognitively, they tend to learn of a different future, and emotionally, shifting relationships with family and peers plays a crucial role in defining their experiences (Lauren & Sharlene, 2012). Adolescence is one of life's most fascinating and complex transitions, a time of accelerated growth and alters second solely to infancy; a time of broadening horizons, self-discovery, and emerging independence, a time of transformation from childhood to adulthood, helping to begin is associated with profound biological, physical, behavioral, and social transformations that roughly correspond with the move to university or higher education. In these confusing years, young people experience a great deal of development, excitement, doubt and confusion (Blanchard, Zucker, Siegelman, Dickey, Klassen, 1998). Relationships between family and peers provide a new significance. Others have little more than a blurred picture of the future as they embark on a protracted quest for paths to promising adulthood. In cultures worldwide, adolescents' onset is closely synchronized with the hormonal changes in puberty (Fried, 2015). Today, in the most technologically sophisticated nations, puberty, on average, starts two years earlier than it did a century ago, and the transition to maturity will take ten years or longer. Early adolescence, which includes the sexual and psychological awakening of puberty and new social struggles, spans from about 10 to 14 years of age (Frost & Meyer, 2009). Middle puberty, a period of increased autonomy and creativity, is between fifteen and seventeen. Late puberty, occurring among those who defer their entrance into adult positions due to educational or social reasons, can vary from 18 to 20 years of age. A time of opportunity and risk for most young people, the teenage transition provides a great opportunity and excitement, if also hardship and disappointment. Some students have noted that, contrary to common wisdom, adolescents as a group are not necessarily troublesome, in comparison, and victims of "hormone hype" for many, experience is surprisingly smooth, mainly where family relationships are based on an appreciation of adolescent developmental needs. Overall, teens' supportive relationships with their families are much less stormy than commonly believed (Iskandar, Setiono, Agustiani, & Muwaga, 2013). In vital adolescent years, most parents have a significant influence on their offspring, helping shape their sense of self and influence their possible life decisions. Peers also have a positive effect on an adolescent, contributing to their Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 77 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 self-esteem (Mujiyati & Adiputra, 2018), sense of identity (Ragelienė, 2016), and achievement (Hayes et al., 2015; Mikami et al., 2017). Peer support is often extremely relevant for those whose parents are emotionally distant, strongly negative, or casually neglectful. Despite reassuring results, teenagers face demands and desires and risks and dangers more frequent and more severe than they were a century earlier. Millions are growing up under conditions that do not satisfy their long-term requirement for ideal development. They give way to peer forces to use drugs and alcohol and cigarettes, to have intercourse and participate in antisocial behaviors (Iskandar et al., 2013). According to Ridge and Feeney (1998), amid serious efforts and investment in providing sexual knowledge, there is only minimal impact among young people. Awareness about sexual activity by most adolescents' 'little' myths and misconception of sexuality, pregnancy, and sexual health are widespread among adolescents. As the conversation about sex or sexual education is something "taboo", especially in several countries such as Asia. Some skeptics argue that it encourages promiscuity among young people and believes that this problem should be avoided to "wake sleeping bears" (Leung, Shek, Leung, & Shek, 2019). Adolescents face legal, social and cultural challenges to accessing factual and useful knowledge about sexual behavior. The knowledge they get from the textbooks is not enough to address the complicated problems of daily life. Social media, such as daily newspapers, television, the internet, and radio, are not credible sources of knowledge and have become critical secondary sources when teenagers are anxious to obtain correct and reliable responses about their sexual behavior. Sexual self-regulation is how adolescents regulate their sexuality (Iskandar et al., 2013). To date, research that supports adolescents' intrinsic and extrinsic sexual self-regulative capacities, particularly in the domain of psychology, is nonexistent. Having sexual self-regulative ability during adolescence is an invaluable tool that is only rarely given due focus in conventional psychological research (Iskandar et al., 2013). Based on the findings available from different researchers, they are always quick to conclude that adolescents' sexual behaviors increase due to changes in a social environment consisting of family, peers and learning institutions (Iskandar et al., 2013; Ridge & Feeney, 1998). Social environments are dynamic and change over time as the result of both internal and external forces. There are relationships of dependency among different local areas' social environments because these areas are connected through more extensive regional, national, and international social and economic processes and power relations (Barnett & Casper, 2001). The changes in the social environment have also been related to changes in the economy, where the higher number of parents working outside the home has more than doubled since the 1970s. The interaction of changes in social environment and employment has increased the amount of time that adolescents spend unsupervised by adults, yet others as they advance in their educational Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 78 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 career; they get separated from their immediate yet significant persons in their lives, therefore increasing the time that they spend alone or with peers. The problems with unsupervised time of adolescents are at least two. First, it provides ample opportunities for adolescents to engage in behaviors that adults might disapprove of or prohibit if they were present. These include behaviors that must be appealing to adolescents', such as alcohol use and sexual intercourse linked to adulthood, maturity, and independence, yet is also health-compromising (Fried, 2015; Noviva & Wahyono, 2020). The developmental need of adolescents for independence and their desire to attain adult status and maturity provide an incentive for them to engage in what they see as adult behaviors. More significant unsupervised time may prematurely grant both independence and emotional emancipation from the family. In the other hand, a prolonged positive atmosphere for adolescents, with incremental moves towards autonomy, tends to improve the health behavior of adolescents (Fried, 2015). However, the researcher has not come across data or research findings that show changes in the social-environment. Simple surveys use single value approaches that do not give comprehensive or detailed explanations about the social environment's functioning with adolescents' sexual behaviors. The researcher appreciates available research findings concerning adolescents' development and their sexual behaviors. However, there's a need for more studies to explore how the social environment influences adolescents' sexuality. There are all reasons to believe that the increase in sexuality among adolescents is due to failures of sexual self-regulation among adolescents and not only failures or changes in the social environment alone. The study conducted by Iskandar et al. (2013) showed the relationship between the social environment and adolescents' sexual self-regulation, affecting sexual self-regulation. Adolescents' lacked the skills to structure their environment, seeking assistance from significant others, for example, parents and university environment. They also revealed that adolescents' lacked the efficacy to stick to their set goals and came to conform to peers' pressure and weak self-efficacy to control their emotions concerning sexual desires. In this research, the social environment will investigate from the point of view of Bandura, which argued that the family, peers and learning institutions have a significant impact on adolescent behavior and that the family is the most important venue for social interaction and participation, "with parents playing a vital role in the schema of adolescent behavior, even though the impact of the family gets weaker in middle adolescence because the center of a youth's activities step by step moves from home to high education and Peer networks, the trend towards decreasing communication effects between parents and their children continues as adolescents enter later adolescence when new forms of commitment to conventional activities replace attachment and communication to parents and become a significant source of the bond to the traditional society for young adults. Bandura proposes that individuals follow right and wrong Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 79 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 principles, which serve as guides and disincentives for self-creation behavior. In this regulatory process, people monitor their conduct and the conditions under which it takes place, judge it about moral standards and regulate their behavior by their consequences. Individuals do what gives them happiness and a sense of self-worth. Individuals renounce actions that contradict their values because such behavior can lead to self-condemnation. Self-sections shall be performed in compliance with national guidelines (Iskandar et al., 2013). This study examines the impact of the social environment on university students' sexual self- regulation in Uganda. METHODS Participants The participants in this study were 408 undergraduate students at Kampala University. The research participation was voluntary, and all participants remained anonymous. All students attending classes on days data were gathered and allowed to participate in the analysis. Few students refused to participate; the approximate figure was more than 90%. Data Collection Data was obtained using convenience technique sampling. The data collection method was carried out by the scale of sexual self-regulation, the social environment, and many demographic factors. For this research's objectives, students were asked about their participation (yes or no) in the following sexual self-regulation behavior: 1) sexual intercourse, necking, petting, 2) sexual intercourse in the last month. These items are commonly used in studies regarding sexual behaviors; relatively few studies have examined sexual self- regulation. Social environment factors such as families, peers and the university environment were also used in the questionnaire. Adequate reliability of items (Cronbach's alpha =.63) was recorded in previous studies, where items were used as a single six-point scale representing participants' understanding of the social environment's view of sexual self-regulation. Since the researcher was studying sexual self-regulation before marriage, the participant's voluntary questionnaire was conducted within the regular class schedule, and the Institutional Review Board (IRB) 's approval was granted before the study. Data Analysis Data were analyzed using both univariate analyses (chi-square and analysis of variance and logistic regression to investigate the impact of social environment on sexual self-regulation of university students in Uganda. Results This study is intended to test the social environment's impact on university students' sexual self-regulation in Uganda empirically. The result can be seen in the table below. Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 80 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 Table 4.1 Goodness of fit for Social Environment Model When the value of 1t1 ≥1.96, then the causal relationship is significant, and from the calculations, the value of t l >1.96 so that the measurement models significant, Factor loading≥0.50, is said to be very significant, from the calculations, factor loading of aspects were above ≥0.50, with construct reliability of .774.Therefore, the hypothesis that, social environment influence adolescents sexual behaviors through religious values, sexual self-regulation and attitudes, results indicates that; 𝑥2= 1.1087, df= 443, p-Value= 0.00; RMSEA= 0.01; RMR = 0.04; GFI = 0.91; AGFI = 0.93. The result of standardized direct coefficient for an integrated social environment model, the correlation between social environment and religious values emerged as (0.582) or 33.64% of the variance of adolescents religious values are accounted for by social environment which emerged to be statistically significant at (P< 0.05), while the remaining 66.36% of the variance is accounted for by factors outside this study, the correlation between social environment and sexual self- regulation is (0.222) or 04.84% of the variance is accounted for by social environment found not to be statistically significant at (P > 0.05), while the remaining 95.16% of the variance is accounted for by unique factors, correlation of social environment and attitudes is (0.892) or 79.21% of the variance is accounted for by social environment revealed to be statistically significant at (P< 0.05), while 20.79 of the variance is accounted for by other unique factors, these correlations suggests that the variables are somewhat related, as would be expected given the fact that it was hypothesized that these aspects influence adolescents sexual behaviors. However, these correlations are not so high. This result suggests that they are all measuring the same construct; the social environment significantly influences religious values and attitudes but not sexual self-regulation. Furthermore, the hypothesis test result indicates that the family environment influences adolescents' sexual behaviors through religious values, sexual self- regulation and attitudes. Testing the family environment reveals the goodness of fit measurement with the available data. Therefore, the hypothesis that family environment influence adolescents’ sexual behaviors through religious values, sexual self-regulation and attitudes, results indicates that 𝑥2 = 1,690, df = 300, p- value = 0.00; RMSEA=, 049; RMR = .461; GFI = .925; CFI = .940. The Goodness of Fit Index (GFI) Predictive fit index Estimates Chi-Square (df) Smaller value 491.01 (443) 1.1087 P (close fit) P ≥ 0.05 0.00 RMSEA RMSEA ≤ 0,08 0.01 RMR RMR ≤ 0,05 0.04 GFI GFI ≥ 0,90 0.91 CFI CFI ≥ 0,90 0.93 Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 81 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 Table 4.2Goodness of fit for Family Environment Model The Goodness of Fit Index (GFI) Predictive fit index Estimates Chi-Square (df) Smaller value 507,097 (300) 1,690 P (close fit) P ≥ 0.05 ,000 RMSEA RMSEA ≤ 0,08 ,049 RMR RMR ≤ 0,05 ,461 GFI GFI ≥ 0,90 ,925 CFI CFI ≥ 0,90 ,940 The result of standardized direct coefficient for family as a social environment that influence adolescents sexual behaviors through religious values, sexual self- regulation and attitudes; the coefficient between family environment and religious values is (0.412) or 16.81% of the variance of adolescents religious values are accounted for by family environment and was revealed to be statistically significant at (P< 0.05), while the remaining 83.19% of the variance is accounted for by factors outside this study, the coefficient between family environment and sexual self-regulation is (-0.052) or -2.5% of the variance is accounted for by family environment not statistically significant at (P> 0.05), while the remaining 102.5% of the variance is accounted for by unique factors, correlation of family environment and attitudes is (0.532) or 28.09 % of the variance is accounted for by family environment statistically significant at (P< 0.05), while 71.91% of the variance is accounted for by other unique factors but not family environment. RESULT AND DISCUSSION The results shown in the following paragraphs give a variety of examples of the complex interactions between adolescence and the social environment and how these relationships may have different behavioral roots, serving multiple roles during adolescent development. The need to transgress societal norms and experience new sensations or new roles is generally more substantial among teens, especially in a family environment. In general, teenagers are less satisfied with communication from their families' implicit information concerning sexual behaviors. They struggle to grasp its utility and feel less confident about their behavior. In reality, they have unpredictable chances of having intercourse because of their present troubled situation of lacking accurate and reliable information from their role models. Based on the fact that expectations characterize teenagers aged 19-21 at University "X" to achieve an educational career, their engagement in sexual behavior of intercourse but not necking and petting are deemed irreproachable. This situation of low religious values of adolescents aged 19-21 appears to be more multifaceted. While they are somewhat unsatisfied with a family Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 82 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 environment that provides them with implicit sexual information, results emerged with a significant relationship between adolescents' sexual regulation and sexual behaviors. However, how adolescents develop these capabilities without being externally supported remains a question of debate. This condition is not a remote observation because research findings on how self-regulation develops among adolescents are inconclusive. Some contend that it is externally stimulated, while others believe that it is internally developed and possible that late adolescents are given their formal cognitive development stage and experience outside their social surroundings. They might have got more information about sexual self-regulation, but they put adolescents at a flash to moderately regulate their sexual behaviors because they were obtained outside reliable sources. Sexual behaviors demonstrate to adolescents and their peers have exceeded their child status and will be embraced by a group of sexually active peers, thereby earning more acceptance and popularity (Rosario, Schrimshaw, Hunter, & Braun, 2006). Adolescents who have had sexual behaviors spend more time with and receive more generous support from their friends, confirmed in the present study where adolescents are engaged in petting behaviors, having a commitment and spending time together. Sexual behavior is more deeply felt where teenagers have insufficient social capital, as proved by findings that social settings do not work to their desires and engage with teenagers regarding sexual self-regulation: self-monitoring, self- efficacy, and self-evaluation. For example, adolescents adopted promiscuous sexual behavior patterns of necking and petting because such behaviors are counted less on their social environment, family, university and peers. These adolescents' perspectives provide a significant resource for developing individual cognitive, emotional and social capacities not well-guided. Sexual behavior becomes the standard to look more mature and identify one from others. For adolescents in the current study, sexual behaviors of petting were deemed as appropriate. Not only do they want to act like and emulate their colleagues, but they want to show themselves by seeking to exceed their colleagues elsewhere. Given their biological changes that dictate their ague for sexual behavior, Adolescents thoroughly regulate their sexual behaviors because they feel constrained to hide them from their friends and family members. Alternatively, they opt for unidentified sexual behaviors such as necking and petting to maintain social harmony in the environment where they function. The Social Cogitative Theory of Self-Regulation claims that adolescents govern their actions based on specific learned competencies or principles of religious principles and perceptions of what they know, their talents, knowledge of moral rules and regulations, and their cognitive abilities to create behaviors (Iskandar et al., 2013; Ridge & Feeney, 1998). Since the social cognitive theory of self- regulation was the driving force of the present study, it is asserted that adolescents aged 19-21 at University "X" in Uganda have not yet acquired Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 83 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 competencies of religious values. Whereas religiosity plays an important role in adolescent sexual activities, greater individual religiosity has been correlated with a lower risk of engaging in any sexual behavior (Quinn & Lewin, 2019), the skills and awareness concerning sexual behaviors of necking and petting, despite their strong evaluative and behavior beliefs of attitudes toward sexual behaviors, they engage in such behaviors because they lack sexual self-regulative competencies and lack clear social standards from their immediate environment of what constitute sexual behaviors, this research has immensely demonstrated that adolescents studied cannot monitor their behaviors and conditions under which behaviors of necking and petting occurs. Adolescents evaluate such behaviors as expected and are within the limits and standards of their social environments. This situation is indicated in their strong sexual self-regulative capacities toward sexual intercourse. There are social and personal consequences attributed to such behaviors. Hines, Brook, and Conway (2004) have identified social cognitive self-regulation in individuals when they do actions that give them pleasure and self-esteem; they withdraw from activities in which they breach their moral values because such conduct brings self- condemnation, and self-restraint holds conduct in line with internal standards. It must be evoked that adolescents aged 19-21 in the present study freely engage in sexual behaviors of necking and petting but not intercourse and could be attributed to the fact that adolescents attitudes towards sexual behaviors were predictive of what behaviors they evaluated as fitting based on their cognitive levels of development, taking the social cognitive theory of self-regulation (Kendler, Thornton, Gilman, & Kessler, 2000). Individuals never participate in harmful acts until they have justified the morality of their conduct on their own. In this situation, adolescents' sexual behaviors of necking and petting are morally justified and socially accepted because they serve the social worth and personal purpose of continuing with the educational pursuit and being free from disease and pregnancies in case of intercourse. In Islam, young people who are deeply committed to their values should be less likely to compromise their religious ideals (Adamczyk & Hayes, 2012). However, adolescents aged 19-21 at University "X" in Uganda have not internalized Islamic religious values of sexual behaviors, revealing their relaxed approval of petting and necking as the behaviors that give them satisfaction. Taking this analysis further, adolescents fear social consequences from their social environment of family, university, and peers in case of intercourse than those assigned by religious teachings. One reason could be that social consequences as physical yet religious consequences are ideological of which adolescents aged 19-21 have not attained the formal operational stage of reasoning from an abstract, but their reasoning is based on concrete proof. Adolescents aged 19-21 at "X" University also mastered evolving sexual feelings and developing a sense of sexual identity, yet this calls for life skills like sexual self-regulation. As adolescents struggle to develop their identity in the social Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 84 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 environment, adolescents studied lacked sexual self-regulative capacities of self- monitoring and self-evaluation. Results from the peer environment indicate that adolescents' communication and approval of peers having sex was predicative of sexual behaviors of necking and petting because their social environment does not place constraints on such behaviors. The social environment is revealed not to influence necking and petting sexual behaviors. It may be due in part to the fact that the social environment becomes more permissive to such behaviors. Sexual self-regulation of adolescents also revealed that their self-evaluation was negative, meaning that these individuals evaluate their sexual behaviors of necking and petting as being not as a result of their own making but factors beyond their reach, adolescents that hold defensive ideas and doubt their ability to the regulator of their behaviors lack adaptive capacities and are not committed to change because of their strong self-efficacy towards sexual behaviors of necking and petting but not intercourse. The form of sexual behaviors that an adolescent engages in depends on a diversity of factors. Its regarded inappropriate in Ugandan culture to engage in intimate sexual behaviors and prohibit premarital childbearing before marriage (Ariho & Kabagenyi, 2020). Even if some adolescents feel sexual urges, adolescents may limit their urges by sexual self-regulation, while, once they have come to trust each other and develop some degree of intimacy, they may engage in more sexual communication without interfering with their social environments. If this is right, the sexual self-regulatory ability will have a larger effect on an individual's sexual behavior, either by controlling his or her actions or by giving in to his or her impulses to a considerable degree, as has been seen in the present research, that all dynamics of the social environment are not crucial to adolescent sexual self-regulation. The family environment was analyzed by Bandura and Thornberry, who concluded that bonding and contact with parents (e.g., interpersonal interaction between the parent and the child; communication patterns; parental abilities, such as supervision and discipline; parent-child conflict; and the like) had a more significant effect on the lives of adolescents, the family is the most salient arena for social interaction and involvement, with parents play a vital role in regulating the actions of adolescents, but the power of the family is diminished in the middle of puberty as the focus of youth interaction increasingly transitions from home to higher education and peer networks. The movement towards declining attachment results to parents persists as teens reach puberty, where new ways of engagement to traditional behaviors (e.g., employment) and one's family largely overtake attachment to parents and become a significant source bond to the traditional community for young adults. Furthermore, for a family environment, religious values were significant towards adolescents' sexual self-regulation. Although adolescents religious values towards sexual behaviors were insignificant, it is essential to strengthening their sexual self-regulative capacities, linking this to the onset of adolescence Muwaga, Nashori & Sholeh | The Impact of Social Environment on The Sexual Self-Regulation of University Students in Uganda 85 International Journal of Islamic Educational Psychology, 1(2), 2020 p. 75-88 significantly increase sexual arousal and, with the example set by youth global culture companions, they are likely to begin petting as this activity provides the first ejaculation in adolescence. Since the social environment influences sexual behaviors through attitude change, sexual behaviors have consequences for unwanted pregnancies and diseases. It leaves adolescents desperate, thereby looking for other safe possible alternatives to sexual behaviors. The activity of petting among adolescents is widespread because it results in orgasm among adolescents, and the absence of social environment or religious objection to petting among teenagers whose biological changes call for sexual experimentation. By petting, adolescents preserve their virginity even though they may achieve orgasm; this means they still value virginity much as the previous generations valued it. This result is consistent with the previous study, which showed that 37% of males and 49% of females did not have sexual intercourse (Agardh, Emmelin, Muriisa, & Östergren, 2010). Sexual self-regulation of adolescents studied was found to be conflicting in all social environments that are family, university and peers, and it emerged that self-monitoring from an integrated composite of the social environment was - 56% while self-efficacy was slightly higher with 82% and self-evaluation -54%. These results reveal that adolescents aged 19-21 at University "X" their sexual self-regulative capacities are in negatives that are -56%, meaning that these people cannot structure their environment through searching for information and rejecting deviant peers. A simple glance at self-efficacy revealed that adolescents aged 19-21 at University "X" in Uganda, their self-efficacy emerged to be 82%, meaning that these adolescents are willing to monitor and structure their environment for appropriate sexual behaviors. However, these adolescents lack the adaptive capacities of self-evaluation, that is -54%. This result means that despite their self-efficacy to monitor their behaviors and environment, they are self-handicapped because they fear losing their friends who engage in sexual behaviors and seeking sexual information from their social environment that would render them promiscuous. This study still has several limitations involving limited subjects, so it was not easy to be generalized to the existing populations. It is crucial to pick variables carefully to completely cover the domain of sexual self-regulation since experiments have been appropriate with a few components and a small sample design and are thus flawed due to a lack of sampling of both variables and various subjects relevant to the topic of sexual self-regulation. CONCLUSION The findings of the study demonstrated how social environments significantly influenced adolescent's sexual self-regulation. The social environment significantly influences adolescent sexual self-regulation through modification of attitudes. 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