Sustainable luxury cannot only be understood as a vehicle for more respect for the environmelll and social development, bu! also as a synonym ofculture. art and innovation of different nationalities and the maintenance of the legacy of local craftsmanship. TI1e overall aim of this chapter is to explore theimportant intersection between traditional Aboriginal cultural and environmental management, knowledge and heritage, with the interest of sustainable luxurytourism in remote wildemess communities in Australia. Socially Sustainable luxury tourism could encompass impo1tant element of empowering and l i fe -sustainingactivities for remote Tndigenous groups on a global scale based if informed by Indigenous cultural governance to facilitate sustainable tourism. We argue that sucha development could bridge the divide between culture and nature explaining how and why management and protection of landscapes and e c o -systems are integral 10human he11tage, culture and a new wave of sustainable luxury tourism. The Mardoowarra, the Fitzroy River and its life ways, in the vast Kimberley, nolthem Western Australia, is highlighted 10 exemplify both our meaning and concern.