Academic Jobs Logo
5 Star1
4 Star0
3 Star0
2 Star0
1 Star0
5.05/4/2026

A true expert who inspires confidence.

About Natt

L.O. Natt Gantt II is Professor of Law and inaugural Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at High Point University Kenneth F. Kahn School of Law, a position he assumed in September 2022. Previously, he served as the inaugural Executive Director of the Harvard Law School Program on Biblical Law and Christian Legal Studies and Lecturer on Law. Gantt spent 21 years at Regent University School of Law in roles including Professor, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, and Co-Director of the Center for Ethical Formation and Legal Education Reform. He holds a Juris Doctor from Harvard Law School, a Master of Divinity from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, and a Bachelor of Arts in psychology and political science from Duke University.

Gantt's scholarship, teaching, and presentations center on law school academic support, legal education reform, legal ethics, professional identity formation, law student and lawyer well-being, and the role of integrity in legal education. He is a national leader on law student and lawyer well-being. Currently, he serves as an advisory member of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Lawyer Assistance Programs (CoLAP) and chairs its Well-Being Committee, Vice President of Law Schools at the Institute for Well-Being in Law, Senior Research Fellow at the Mockler Center for Faith and Ethics in the Public Square at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Visiting Fellow there, and faculty presenter at the Christian Legal Society Fellows Program. Key publications include “The Centrality of Spiritual Well-Being to Professional Formation” (Holloran Center Professional Identity Implementation Blog, 2024), a chapter in Sabbath as Resilience: Spiritual Refreshment for a Stressed-Out World (Mockler Center Fellows, 2025), “Self-Directedness and Professional Formation: Connecting Two Critical Concepts in Legal Education” (with Benjamin V. Madison III, 2018), “Deconstructing Thinking Like a Lawyer: Analyzing the Cognitive Components of the Analytical Mind” (Campbell Law Review, 2007), and “More Than Lawyers: The Legal and Ethical Implications of Biblical Counseling for the Practice of Law” (2005).