OK, "chained assignment" was the search term I was after, but after a bit more digging I think it's not strictly correct. but it is easier to search for than "a special case of the assignment statement".
The Wikipedia article senderle linked to says:
In Python, assignment statements are not expressions and thus do not
return a value. Instead, chained assignments are a series of
statements with multiple targets for a single expression. The
assignments are executed left-to-right so that i = arr[i] = f()
evaluates the expression f(), then assigns the result to the leftmost
target, i, and then assigns the same result to the next target,
arr[i], using the new value of i.
Another blog post says:
In Python, assignment statements do not return a value. Chained
assignment (or more precisely, code that looks like chained assignment
statements) is recognized and supported as a special case of the
assignment statement.
This seems the most correct to me, on a closer reading of the docs - in particular (target_list "=")+ - which also say
An assignment statement evaluates the expression list ... and assigns
the single resulting object to each of the target lists, from left to
right.
So it's not really "evaluated from right-most to left" - the RHS is evaluated and then assigned from left-most target to right - not that I can think of any real-world (or even contrived) examples where it would make a difference.