*** Foreword and Acknowledgements by David Berry

*** List of Acronyms

* Introduction

** The Search for a Libertarian Communism: Daniel Guérin and the “Synthesis” of Marxism and Anarchism

*** Early Influences

*** The Bankruptcy of Stalinism and Social Democracy

*** The Break from Trotskyism

*** The “Mother of Us All”

*** The Developing Critique of Leninism

*** From Trotskyism to New Left to Anarchism

*** Guérin and Anarchism

*** Proudhon and the Fundamental Importance of Self-management

*** Stirner the “Father of Anarchism”?

*** For a “Synthesis” of Marxism and Anarchism

*** Conclusion

* For a Libertarian Communism

** Why “Libertarian Communist”?

** The Rehabilitation of Anarchism

** Proudhon and Workers’ Self-Management

*** By Way of a Conclusion

** Three Problems of the Revolution

*** Spontaneity and Consciousness

*** The Question of Power

*** The Management of the Economy

** The French Revolution De-Jacobinized

*** The Direct Democratization of 1793

*** Direct Democracy and Vanguard

*** The Reconstituting of the State

*** The Embryo of a Plebeian Bureaucracy

*** “Anarchy” Deduced from the French Revolution

*** The “Jacobin” Tradition

*** Towards a Synthesis

** Two Indictments of Communism

** May, a Continuity, a Renewal

** Self-Management in Revolutionary Spain, 1936–1937

*** From One Province to Another

*** The Sabotage of Self-management

*** Industrial Self-management

*** Industrial Self-management Dismantled

** Libertarian Communism, the Only Real Communism

* Appendices

** Appendix I: The Libertarian Communist Platform of 1971[281]

** Appendix II: The 1989 “Call for a Libertarian Alternative”

** Bibliography

** About the Author

** About the Editor

** About the Translator