Medius and X, you may be interested in Mutualism:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutualism_(economic_theory)
It's a vision that implement human liberation in a market context. I find it acceptable from the standpoint of human liberation, even though I've kind of turned my back on the concept of the market.
Also, I am not personally concerned with owning a means of production in itself, but rather that it can be used to implement wage labor. One cannot implement wage labor unless one controls society in its entity, as a state does. It is necessary to enclose the common in order to facilitate wage slavery.
Property such as a small farm or personal brewery isn't a problem unless the common is all privately owned excluding the larger part of society getting the resources they need in order to extort labor from them.
It is specifically the extortion of labor from an individual that I am against. And of course if a segment of society uses it's political power to create an inescapable condition designed to facilitate this type of extortion it's an issue.
Anyway, the point is there has to be a lot of flexibility if liberty is to exist. I do realize that.