“…By in large, theories of regional development only partly explain the spatial peculiarities of inequality and (dis)advantage in resource economies through convergence and divergence processes of core‐periphery resource exploitation and wealth accumulation. Much of these understandings have emerged from binary notions of how resource redistribution occurs between the Global North and Global South, with limited research unpacking different industry relations and processes driving regional development in developing nations of the Global South (e.g., Horner & Murphy, ) and advanced capitalist nations of the Global North (e.g., James, ; Martinus, ). Indeed, as noted by Horner, Schindler, Haberly, and Aoyama () and Rodríguez‐Pose (), there has been a reversal in how globalization processes are interpreted in advanced capitalist and developing nations, with a “backlash” in the former from the political right as uneven development deepens within its nations.…”