in
Skopje, Macedonia, in 2018 After the initial breakup of Yugoslavia at the beginning of the 1990s,
Montenegro and
Serbia continued a state union as the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia from April 1992 to February 2003, then simply as Serbia and Montenegro until its own dissolution in June 2006. The number of self-declared
Yugoslavs (in the ethnic sense) in the region reached an all-time low after the breakup of Yugoslavia. The former country's lingua franca,
Serbo-Croatian, is no longer the official language of any of the former state's constituent republics. There are few works published about the language, and it no longer has a standardizing body. The
.yu Internet domain name, which was popular among Yugo-nostalgic websites, was phased out in 2010. However, by the start of the 2010s an increasing number of Slovenes were experiencing Yugo-nostalgia. In
Subotica,
Vojvodina (the northern province of Serbia), one man set up Yugoland, a
theme park dedicated to Tito and Yugoslavia. People from all over the former Yugoslavia travel great distances to celebrate the legacy of the late country. On
Yugoslavia's Youth Day, a day traditionally known as Tito's birthday, popular gathering places for Yugo-nostalgics include
Kumrovec, the small village in
Croatian Zagorje where Tito was born, and his resting place at the
House of Flowers. These sites attract several thousand visitors each year. In Croatia, the "Alliance of Yugoslavs" () was established in 2010 in Zagreb, an association aiming to unite the Yugoslavs of Croatia, regardless of religion, gender,
political or other views. Its main goal is the official recognition of the
Yugoslav nation in every
Yugoslav successor state: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia. Another organization advocating Yugoslavism is the "Our Yugoslavia" association () founded on 30 July 2009, seated in
Pula, which is an officially registered organization in Croatia. The association has most members in the towns of
Rijeka,
Zagreb, and
Pula. Its main aim is the stabilisation of relations among the Yugoslav successor states. It is also active in Bosnia and Herzegovina, however, its official registration as an association was denied by the Bosnian state authorities. Yugo-nostalgia retains a stronghold among former Yugoslav populations who emigrated the country before its breakup, most prominently in the United States, Canada, and Australia. They have been described as 'de-patriated': "scattered all over the world, without a homeland" or "a hope of returning home someday". == Yugoslav reunification ==