This article considers Yugonostalgia as a polycentric and polymorphic phenomenon (Velikonja, 2010), critical and subversive, which expresses itself as a resistance strategy. This study focuses on the last generation of pioneers in three ex-Yugoslav countries : Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Serbia. Yugoslav Pioneers were part of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. They comprised all school children attending the first seven grades of primary school. These former pioneers are old enough to have lived in Yugoslavia but too young to have experienced the best years of Yugoslavia. What are their feelings of nostalgia, if they do have any ? Yugonostalgia today, among the generation of last pioneers is a complex feeling. It expresses a resistance strategy in two senses : on the one hand, as a resistance against the negation of the roots of their identity, a negation born out of the historical revisionism of the political elites, and on the other hand, as a strategy for the legitimization of their social and political demands today, especially their anti-nationalistic positions.If we approach nostalgia as a productive and analytical category (Petrović, 2012), then the fact that Yugoslavia no longer exists does not imply that Yugoslavs no longer exist, nor that those Yugoslavs can’t have explicit socio-economic and political demands towards their respective states, which reaffirms our thesis that Yugonostalgia for the last pioneers signifies more than a banal and intimate phenomenon.