Rubble Stone Walls I agree with the spray foam option. A membrane may be cheaper on a material only point of view but add the labour to get 100% gas tight seal and you will see the foam is likley your best bet.. The foam will provide an excellent soil gas barrier with as close to a perfect (air/soil gas) seal as you can get..
Demilec, as well as other foams have recently been demonstrated through lab testing to perform very well as radon barriers; even outperforming polyethylene. Demilec was one of them. You can contact CUFCA for others. There are actual radon diffusive rates available on the foam that you can use to engineering systems.
Below is a link to a paper on interior spray foam insulation of rubble walls. This is written by Joe Lstiburek of Building Science Press. They will have other reports that will fit your needs if the one I have referenced does not.. Joe Lstiburek is a renowned Building Science Engineer so you shouldn't have any problems getting architects, engineers or code officials to accept his designs. I do not believe he has done anything radon specific but if you apply the spray foam sealing and radon barrier characteristics it will get the job done very well. Remember the lions share or radon entry is mass transport of soil gas and not diffusive transport so a great air barrier is more important than a material with a super low radon diffusion coeffient.
https://buildingscience.com/documents/insights/bsi-041-rubble-foundations
Keep in mind spray foam contains isocyante and should only be sprayed by qualified contractors with proper ventilation and only when the house is vacant. The isocyantes will be used up during the application and will be vented outside. But if you were to spray it indoors without proper procedures and homeowners at home they could be come chemically scensatized. It can be done very safely just pick the best contractor who can demonstrate they know the hazards and control measures. Maybe get an industrial hygienist CIH involved for oversight.
Hope this helps.